40 more drowned ferry passengers found off Indonesia, raising toll to 63

Web_photo_ferry_24_12_2015

An Indonesian woman cries as she checks the passenger list of a capsized ferry at a crisis center in Siwa, Wajo, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, 21 December 2015.

INDONESIA - Rescuers recovered 40 more bodies from waters in central Indonesia on Thursday, raising the confirmed death toll from the weekend sinking of a passenger boat to 63. Fifteen people are still missing.

The Marina Baru 2B, carrying 118 passengers and crewmen, sank in the Gulf of Bone on Saturday while on its way from Kolaka in Southeast Sulawesi province to Siwa town in South Sulawesi province.

The fibreglass ferry reportedly was overwhelmed by waves more than 3m high during stormy weather.

The head of the local disaster mitigation agency, Alamsyah, revised the number of survivors to 40, saying one person had been counted twice.

 

 

Most of the survivors were pulled out on Sunday. The last one was the boat’s captain, who was found on Monday snagged on a fishing platform, said Alamsyah, who uses a single name.

Operational chief of South Sulawesi’s Search and Rescue Agency Deden Ridwansyah said all but one of the bodies recovered on Thursday were found intact.

Ridwansyah said the search for the remaining 15 missing would be carried out until Saturday.

Boats are a popular form of transportation in Indonesia’s 17,000 islands, but overcrowding and poor safety enforcement make accidents common.

Paid Content