Authorities began an investigation Saturday into a ship collision on the 
Yangtze River that left six person confirmed dead and 47 passengers still 
unaccounted for. 
 
 
 | 
    
 Rescue workers carry a shipwreck survivor on a stretcher 
 to a hospital in Chongqing, southwest China, Thursday, June 19, 
 2003. [Xinhua]  | 
An investigation team, 
headed by Shan Chunchang, deputy director of the State Administration of Work 
Safety (SAWS), has been tasked with finding the causes of the accident and 
supervising salvage operations. 
A passenger liner capsized on the Yangtze River on June 19 after colliding 
with a freighter in a section of the river in southwestern Chongqing 
Municipality. 
The Yangtze River Three Gorges Shipping Co. passenger liner was sailing 
downstream when it collided with a freighter heading upstream near Longqiao 
town, Fuling district, at 7:55 a.m. on Thursday 
Initial reports released on June 19 by local authorities showed 23 dead or 
missing. 
But further investigation showed six person confirmed dead, 47 others still 
missing, and 12 confirmed survivors. 
The passengers reportedly included students and vegetable sellers on their 
way to market.