Heavy rains forced rescuers to stop searching Thursday for more than 500
people feared dead after an overcrowded ferry sank in southern Bangladesh.
Bangladeshi man grieves relatives feared dead after a
ferry disaster at the river Meghna at Chandpur, 170 km (106 miles)
southeast of the capital Dhaka, July 10, 2003. Heavy rain and swift
currents put a halt to a search on Thursday.
[Reuters]
Crews still haven't even found
the ferry MV Nasreen, which went down Tuesday night with 750 people aboard and
is believed to be under about 200 feet of water.
"We have not been able to determine where the ferry is. Locating the ferry is
our first job before any salvage operation can start," said Abdur Rab Howlader,
a regional government administrator.
Hundreds of relatives lined the shore desperate to locate loved ones, while
others raised black flags of mourning over their village homes.
Rescue officials said 220 people survived and only four bodies had been
found. The exact number of passengers was unclear because ferries do not carry
passenger lists and many people buy tickets when on board.
Dhaka's Ittefaq newspaper reported the ferry was carrying more than 1,000
people. Many passengers were sleeping and feared trapped inside the ferry when
it sank.
"I shall not leave this place until I find my son," cried Khaleda Akthar, a
25-year-old woman who had been on the top deck but was missing her 5-month-old
son Bacchu.
Akthar was traveling from Dhaka where she works in a garment factory to her
village home in the Bhola district when it sank. "My relatives wanted to see my
baby," she said.
Bangladeshis search for the bodies of their loved ones in
the river Meghna at Chandpur 106 miles southeast of the capital Dhaka,
July 10, 2003. Hundreds are believed to have died after the passenger
ferry M.V. Nasreen sank with over 600 people on board late Tuesday night.
[Reuters]
The ferry, which had a capacity for only 350 people, sank where three
flood-swollen rivers, the Padma, Meghna and Dakatia, meet in Chandpur, 64 miles
southeast of Dhaka.
Choppy waters washed dolls, shoes, dresses, suitcases and other belongings
ashore.
Two salvage ships were trying to locate the sunken ferry. The ships are
equipped with cranes to pull the ferry up from the river bed.
Authorities also called in navy divers to help with the salvage work.
Heavy monsoon rains have swollen many rivers in Bangladesh, which has been
hit by floods in the past two weeks that have killed at least 95 people.
Frequent boating accidents claim hundreds of lives every year in this delta
nation of 130 million people. They are often blamed on overloading, faulty
construction and disregard for safety measures.
In April, following protests by boat operators, Bangladesh officials withdrew
a ban on night travel by ferries that was instituted after a series of
accidents.
In return for the lifting of the ban, ferry owners promised not to operate
their vessels in inclement weather and to follow safety regulations.
Two river ferries went down on April 21 in separate accidents near Dhaka,
killing more than 135 people.