More than 500 missing after ferry sinks off Indonesia
More than 500 people were missing Saturday after an Indonesian ferry
sank in a storm off the coast of Java, where search and rescue efforts
were being hampered by rough seas.
Officials said they lost contact with the vessel around midnight
(1700 GMT Friday) when it was off the Java coast.
At least 59 people had been rescued and a life raft had been found
with an unknown number of people in it, port official Slamet Rahardjo
told reporters here. Twenty-one survivors found in a life raft were
being brought into Rembang on the coast 100 kilometres (60 miles)
northeast of Semarang.
The ferry was carrying 545 passengers and 57 crew when it sank, he
said. It was licensed to carry 850.
Heavy seas with waves five to six metres (about 17 to 20 feet) high
were hampering search and rescue efforts with only larger navy ships
able to go out, as two other ships were forced to turn back.
"The search will continue tonight with two naval ships," Transport
Minister Hatta Radjasa told MetroTV after arriving in Semarang, where
anxious relatives searched lists of survivors for news of loved ones.
Radjasa said "we are using our maximum efforts to rescue as many
people as possible". The "Senopati Nusantara" (Archipelago Commander)
had been due in Semarang late Friday after what should have been a
19-hour voyage.
Navy ships and helicopters earlier found some of the survivors
stranded on the nearby island of Bawean, but could not find any trace of
the ship, ElShinta radio said.
An air force C-235 patrol aircraft was also searching for survivors.
One survivor said 19 people were plucked from the sea by passing
fishermen and taken to Bawean.
He described panic as the ship rocked violently before sinking late
at night.
"Finally, at about 11:00 pm, people were really panicking as we could
feel the ship rocking violently. People were then asked to put on their
life jackets and hang on to some floats," Holit told ElShinta.
"We were all suddenly thrown into the water and floating on the sea,
and I had lost my daughter," he said.
"I hung on to a float and at 6:00 am the next day a fisherman's boat
spotted us after hearing our cries for help," said Holit, whose
18-year-old daughter, Lailatul Badriah, was still missing.
The ferry left Kumai in Central Kalimantan province on Borneo island
en route to Semarang in Central Java 420 kilometres (260 miles) away,
and sank near Mandalika island off the Java coast. It was not known
exactly where it went down. |