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Eight dead, dozen missing after Hong Kong ferry sinks

Sun Wukong

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset

Eight dead, dozen missing after Hong Kong ferry sinks

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HONG KONG | Mon Oct 1, 2012 2:20pm EDT

(Reuters) - At least eight people died and more than a dozen are missing after a ferry packed with more than 120 passengers collided with a tugboat and sank south of Hong Kong on Monday night.

More than 100 have been lifted so far from waters off Lamma, an island south of Hong Kong popular with tourists and expatriates, but it was not immediately clear how many were dead, a government spokeswoman said.

A spokesman for the Hospital Authority said: "Eight are dead so far, we do not have their identities and it is not clear how many are adults or children."

The ferry, belonging to The Hongkong Electric Company, was carrying company staff and family members on an evening cruise to watch fireworks at Victoria Harbour. It sank quickly.

"Our ferry left Lamma island at 8.15 pm to watch the fireworks display out at sea, but within a few minutes, a tugboat smashed into our vessel ... which then left without stopping," Yuen Sui-see, operations director for the company, told reporters.

Television pictures showed the red and blue bow of the ferry pointing skywards, surrounded by rescue vessels as government helicopters with search lights circled overhead.

Survivors were being taken to hospitals on Hong Kong island and Lamma island. "Some of them are suffering hypothermia and four had to be resuscitated," a paramedic at the Queen Mary Hospital on Hong Kong island said.

"We will do all we can to find those who are still missing," Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying told reporters at a pier on Hong Kong island where many of the survivors were brought ashore.

The accident occurred over a long holiday weekend in Hong Kong, which is celebrating the mid-autumn festival and China's National Day on October 1.

Thousands of Hong Kong residents live on outlying islands such as Lamma, which lies about 3 km (2 miles) off the southwest of Hong Kong island.

Hong Kong is one of the world's busiest shipping channels, although serious accidents are rare.

(Reporting by Tan Ee Lyn, Donny Kwok, Stefanie McIntyre and James Pomfret; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and Robert Woodward)







 

Sun Wukong

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset

Hong Kong ferry collision kills 37


Published: 02 October, 2012, 11:23

Two passenger ferries have collided off the coast of Hong Kong, leaving at least 37 people dead in one of the worst disasters to hit the city. Six crew members were arrested following the incident suspected of “endangering people's lives at sea.”

One of the boats was ferrying employees of The Hong Kong Electric Company and their families to watch the fireworks for China’s National Day celebrations when the collision occurred. A passenger ferry bound for southeastern Lamma Island plowed into it at high speed, capsizing the vessel.

"Our ferry left Lamma Island at 8:15pm to watch the fireworks display out at sea, but within a few minutes, a tugboat [which turned out to be another ferry] smashed into our vessel," Yuen Sui-see, a director for Hong Kong Electric, one of the city's two main electricity generators, told reporters.

Shortly after the incident the stricken ship began to sink vertically, with over 100 people tossed into the sea. Survivors of the collision said that some people were trapped as the ship went under and were forced to break windows in order to escape.

"We thought we were going to die. Everyone was trapped inside," said a middle-aged woman to Reuters.

The incident sparked a mass rescue operation, involving helicopters, dive teams and scores of boats. The search is still underway amid fears that victims of the collision may still be trapped on board the stricken vessel.

“We also don't rule out that some may have swam to shore themselves and haven't contacted their families and so may not be accounted for," Ng Kuen-chi, acting deputy director of fire services told local television.

The disaster is the worst to hit the port city since 1996, when 40 people died in a commercial building fire. Hong Kong’s authorities have pledged a thorough investigation into the crash, which happened when the city’s waterways were at their busiest on Monday evening. Flotillas of ships were gathering to watch the China Day fireworks.

"Normally vessels ought to stay and help other vessels in distress. But what we heard was that the other ship had passengers who were injured and needed help," a maritime department spokesman said to reporters.

For health reasons, investigators have not yet been able to talk to the captain of the ferry to ascertain what caused the collision.

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The damaged bow of the Sea Smooth ferry is seen docked at the Lamma Island pier following a collision with the Lamma IV boat off Hong Kong late on October 1, 2012. (AFP Photo/Laurent Fievet)

rescued-persons-vessel-ferry.jpg


Rescued persons are transported on a police vessel after a collision between a ferry and another boat killed eight people and injured 45 others off Hong Kong late on October 1, 2012. (AFP Photo/Apple Daily)

survivor-shore-rescued-sea.jpg


A survivor (C) is taken onto shore after being rescued from the sea in Hong Kong October 1, 2012. (Reuters/Tyrone Siu)

rescuers-search-partially-submerged-boat.jpg


Rescuers search for survivors in a partially-submerged boat after two vessels collided in Hong Kong October 1, 2012. (Reuters/Tyrone Siu)

police-boats-sunken-ferry.jpg


Police boats (L) are seen near a sunken ferry being lifted out of the water after an accident off Hong Kong October 2, 2012. (Reuters/Tyrone Siu)

 
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