AP/Yonhap
Helicopters try to rescue passengers from a sinking ferry off the southern coast in South Korea on Wednesday.
Dozens of military boats and helicopters scrambled on Wednesday to
rescue more than 470 people, including 325 high school students on a
school trip, after a ferry sank off South Korea’s southern coast,
killing at least two and injuring 14, officials said.
The ferry with 476 people was sailing to the southern island of Jeju
when it sent a distress call on Wednesday morning after it began leaning
to one side, according to Ministry of Security and Public
Administration. The government said about 95 per cent of the ship was
submerged.
Two Coastguard officers said that a 27-year-old woman named Park
Ji-yeong and another unidentified person had died. One of the officers
said 180 passengers had been rescued so far, but gave no further
details, including what caused the ship to sink or the conditions of the
other passengers.
A student, Lim Hyung-min, told broadcaster YTN from a gym on a
nearby island that he jumped into the ocean wearing a life jacket with
other students and then swam to a nearby rescue boat.
“As the ship was shaking and tilting, we all tripped and bumped into
each another,” Mr. Lim said, adding that some people were bleeding. Once
he jumped, the ocean “was so cold. ... I was hurrying, thinking that I
wanted to live.”
Local media ran photos showing the partially submerged ship tilting
dramatically as helicopters flew overhead and rescue vessels and a small
boat covered with an orange tarp over it floated nearby.
The students are from a high school in Ansan city near Seoul and they
were on their way to the Jeju island for a four-day trip, according to a
relief team set up by Gyeonggi Province, which governs the city. The
ship left Incheon port, just west of Seoul, on Tuesday evening,
according to Busan Regional Maritime Affairs & Port Administration.
At the high school, students were sent home and parents gathered for news about the ferry.
A total of 16 helicopters, 34 rescue vessels and Navy divers were sent
to the area, Lee Gyeong-Og, a vice minister for South Korea’s Public
Administration and Security Ministry, told a televised news conference.
He said President Park Geun-hye ordered a thorough rescue operation to
prevent deaths. He said 14 had been injured so far, including one
described as serious, and taken to hospitals.
Mr. Lee said that Navy special forces and an underwater demolition team
would help rescue passengers who’d jumped into the water as the ship
sank.
No comments:
Post a Comment