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Hundreds feared drowned in ferry disaster

Calum MacLeod
USA TODAY
Relatives weep as they wait for missing passengers of a sunken ferry at Jindo port on April 16, 2014 in Jindo-gun, South Korea.   The ferry Sewol's passengers included high school students and teachers.

BEIJING — New hope may have surfaced Wednesday for the fate of 300 missing passengers trapped aboard a sunken ferry that divers spent hours searching.

The father of one of the missing passengers said he received a text message from his child that said there were still passengers alive on board the boat, Al Jazeera reported.

The text message read, "I am alive, there are students alive, please save us quickly," according to Al Jazeera.

Al Jazeera reporter Harry Fawcett, however, said the timing of the text messages was not clear.

Outside of that development, officials appeared to be losing hope.

"I'm afraid there's little chance for those trapped inside still to be alive," rescue official Cho Yang Bok told YTN television.

Survivors plucked from the frigid sea or hoisted from the sinking boat by helicopter crews told of panic as passengers heard a loud bang and then the ship suddenly lurched over, sending furniture and people sliding to the port side.

"As the ferry was shaking and tilting, we all tripped and bumped into each another," student Lim Hyung Min said, retelling who he and others jumped into the sea in life jackets and swam to a rescue boat.

The water "was so cold. ... I was hurrying, thinking that I wanted to live," Lim said.

A coast guard official said the death toll was now confirmed at seven, but that is expected to rise sharply because the missing have now spent more than a day either trapped in the ferry or in the cold seawater.

Nearly 290 people had yet to be accounted for. Families of the missing stood at a dock, crying and holding one another. Boats circled the sunken ferry into the night, illuminated by red flares.

The Sewol set off from Incheon, a city in South Korea's northwest, on Tuesday night for a 14-hour journey to the tourist island of Jeju with 462 people aboard. Most of the passengers were students from a high school in Ansan, just south of Seoul.

The 480-foot-long ship was authorized to carry more than 900 people and 180 vehicles, according to Korea news media reports.

Although the cause of the disaster had not been determined officially, the ferry was sailing along a different route to make up for time lost because of heavy fog, Korean television station Arirang said.

Setting off later than expected, the captain changed the ship's path to make port on time, sailing through an area known to have rocky shoals, the station said.

"There was a bang, and then the ship suddenly tilted over," said a 57-year-old survivor, identified only by the surname Yoo, Yonhap news agency reported.

Some of those who managed to escape the ship told Korean media that the captain had told passengers to remain where they were, which may have reduced their chances of survival, they said.

"I ran into my room, after I heard the announcement. But things didn't seem right," a female student who jumped into the water told a local TV station, the Korea Times newspaper reported.

Passengers on the left side of the ferry who followed the captain's instructions may have been trapped in the sinking ship as it listed, the newspaper said, while those on the right, or starboard, side could crawl out of portholes and jump into the sea or wait for helicopter buckets to be lowered down.

Divers searched three compartments of the ferry, which sank after floating for several hours on its side. About 160 divers searched throughout the night in the hope that passengers may have found pockets of air for breathing inside the sunken ship.

"We cannot give up," said South Korean President Park Geun Hye. "We have to do our best to rescue even one passenger."

The Sewol was three hours from its destination about 9 a.m. Wednesday when it sent a distress call, said the Ministry of Security and Public Administration. The ship was soon surrounded by ships and helicopters and rescuers plucked dazed students, many wearing life jackets, out of the water or off the vessel's side.

Yonhap said 175 people had been rescued before the ship turned belly up and sank. Ships, airplanes and helicopters buzzed around the hull in a continuing search for survivors in the swift-moving, muddy water 12 miles off the island of Byeongpoong.

Arirang TV interviewed several survivors cloaked in blankets who said the sea was calm before the disaster.

A relative weeps as she waits for missing passengers of a sunken ferry at Jindo port in South Korea on April 16, 2014.

"Then all of a sudden, the ship felt like it flipped on its side violently," an elderly man lying on a rescue ship told the station. "People were cornered and they couldn't get out of their cabins because they couldn't open the doors."

A male student said he was yelling for 40 minutes before he was rescued.

"Things were falling and people were sliding down the ship," he said.

Relatives of people missing from the ferry wait at a Jindo port on April 16 in Jindo-gun, South Korea.
Passengers are rescued from the sinking ferry.

At Ansan Danwon High School, students were sent home and parents gathered for news about the ferry. Park Ji Hee, a first-year student, said she saw about a dozen parents crying at the school entrance.Parents clung to cellphones awaiting calls from their children.

Contributing: Associated Press

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