This undated picture released by the Mokpo Coast Guard Station on April 16, 2014 shows the 6,825-ton vessel Sewol that was at the centre of a rescue operation after it sent a distress signal. South Korea despatched coastguard vessels and helicopters on April 16 to rescue around 450 passengers - mostly high school students - on a ferry sinking off the southern coast, officials said.
South Korea's coastguard said Wednesday one person had been
killed as it struggled to rescue 476 people - mostly high school
students - aboard a ferry that ran aground and sank off the southern
coast.
Lee Gyeong-Og, the vice minister of security and
public administration, told a press briefing in Seoul that he could
only confirm the rescue of 161 people so far.
However,
he added that commercial ships involved in the operation were understood
to have rescued a significant number of people.
"The
ferry is almost completely submerged," Lee said, adding that a
detachment of South Korean Navy SEALS were taking part in the rescue.
Lee had said there were no reports of casualties so far, but the coastguard later said one person had been killed.
"We have recovered one body from the ship so far," a spokesman told AFP.
Photos
broadcast on television showed the ship initially tilted over 45
degrees on the port side with helicopters flying overhead, and then
fully capsized with only its stern visible.
Of the 450
passengers on board the ferry bound for the southern resort island of
Jeju, 325 were students from a high school in Ansan, south of Seoul. The
remainder of those on board were crew.
Coastguard
officials said the crew sent out a distress signal at 9:00 am (0000 GMT)
with passenger testimony suggesting it may have run aground.
"We heard a big thumping sound and the boat stopped," one passenger told DRIVE HOT NEWS by telephone.
The
6,825-tonne ferry, which had sailed out of the western port of Incheon
on Tuesday evening, ran into trouble some 20 kilometres (13 miles) off
the island of Byungpoong.
Distraught parents of the students gathered at the high school in Ansan, desperate for news.
TV
footage showed a chaotic scene in the school's auditorium, with parents
yelling at school officials and frantically trying to make phone calls
to their children.
"I talked to my daughter. She said she had been rescued along with 10 other students," one mother told DRIVE HOT NEWS
"They
said they had jumped into the water before getting rescued. One was
injured in the leg and is being treated in hospital," she said.
Lee Gyeong-Og said 34 naval, coastguard and civilian vessels were involved in the rescue operation, along with 18 helicopters.
In a personal message, President Park Geun-Hye "ordered us to make efforts not to leave a single casualty," he said.
The ferry manifest included 150 cars.
Hundreds
of ferries ply the waters between the South Korean mainland and its
multiple offshore islands every day, and accidents are relatively rare.
However in one of the worst incidents, nearly 300 people died when a ferry capsized off the western coast in October, 1993.
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