Boat sinks off Hong Kong after collision; 36 dead
HONG KONG (AP) — A boat packed with revelers on a long holiday weekend collided with a ferry and sank off Hong Kong, killing at least 36 people and injuring dozens in the deadliest accident to strike the Chinese territory in years.
The
boat was carrying utility company workers and their families to famed
Victoria Harbour to watch a fireworks display in celebration of China's National Day and mid-autumn festival. The two vessels collided Monday night near Lamma Island off the southwestern coast of Hong Kong Island.
The
government said 36 bodies had been recovered as of Tuesday morning and
the search was made difficult by low visibility and obstacles on the
boat. Details about the victims were not given, though local outlet RTHK
reported some of the dead were children.
More
than 100 people were rescued and sent to hospitals, and nine had
serious or critical injuries, the government's statement said. At least
one person appeared to be missing, according to government figures.
Such
large-scale accidents are rare for Hong Kong, a semiautonomous enclave
off mainland China that has one of Asia's most advanced infrastructures
and economies with first-rate public services.
The tragedy is also the latest test for the new administration of Hong Kong's Beijing-installed chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, who rushed to the pier where rescue work was taking place.
Leung's
July inauguration was greeted by protests, and opposition by students
and their parents against the proposed teaching of China-influenced
patriotic history forced his government to back off the plan last month.
"All
of Hong Kong's emergency forces are focused here," Leung said earlier.
"Wide-ranging rescue work is being carried out on in the sea, land and
in the air." Leung said he didn't know what caused the collision but
promised a thorough investigation.After daybreak, the boat was half submerged with its bow pointing almost straight up. A barge was tied alongside it, apparently to stabilize the sunken boat and keep it from tipping further.
Hong Kong fire services
had deployed seven boats, including one to support diving operations,
and more than 200 rescue personnel, the government said. Four rescue
boats and a team of divers also were dispatched from the mainland
Chinese province of Guangdong just across the border, the official
Xinhua News Agency reported.
"There
was a boat that came in close and crashed," said Yuen Sui-see, director
of operations at Power Assets Holdings Ltd., which was using the vessel
to take staff on the outing. "After the crash, the other boat continued
away, it didn't stop." He denied the vessel was overloaded, saying it
was carrying 121 passengers and three crew but had capacity for more
than 200 passengers.
Local
news reports said the boat was hit by a ferry operated by the Hong Kong
and Kowloon Ferry company on a regularly scheduled service. RTHK said
the ferry captain was afraid to stop in case it sank, too, and returned
to port safely. Local TV later showed images of the ferry, with its bow
chewed up and chunks missing.
Survivors said the boat started
sinking rapidly after the collision. One woman told local television
that she swallowed a lot of water as she swam back to shore. Another man
said he didn't know where his children were. Neither gave their names.
Lamma
is the third-biggest island in Hong Kong and near one of the coastal
Chinese city's busiest shipping lanes. The island is home to about 6,000
people, including many of the former British colony's expatriate
workers.
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