Death toll in Philippine ferry sinking now at 108
By
AFP
September 02, 2013
MANILA: Philippine divers have recovered more dead bodies from a ferry that sank after colliding with a cargo ship, raising the...
MANILA: Philippine divers have recovered more dead bodies from a ferry that sank after colliding with a cargo ship, raising the death toll from the incident to 108, the coastguard said Monday.
Twenty-nine more passengers are still unaccounted for, more than two weeks after the St Thomas Aquinas went down off the port of the central city of Cebu, it said in its latest report.
Rescuers were able to save 733 people after the crash, the latest in a long list of sea mishaps to hit the Philippines, an archipelago of more than 7,100 islands.
The Aquinas was passing through a narrow sealane on its way to the port of Cebu when it was hit by the freighter on August 16.
The ferry quickly sank and now lies on the seabed about 30 metres (98 feet) underwater, while the cargo vessel remained afloat despite sustaining damage.
The sinking also led to an oil spill from the ferry, polluting mangrove sanctuaries, fishing grounds and beach resorts.
Next Story >>>