Hong Kong boat collision kills 36 holiday revelers
Topics: From the Wires, News
Relatives of the victim who killed in ferry collision, leave a public mortuary in Hong Kong Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2012. 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, authorities said. 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. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)(Credit: Kin Cheung)HONG KONG (AP) — Authorities on Tuesday boarded a half-submerged boat that collided with a ferry a night earlier, killing at least 36 people who had been on their way to a holiday fireworks show. It was Hong Kong’s worst accident in well over a decade.
There was no immediate word about how Monday night’s collision occurred on the tightly regulated waterways of one of Asia’s safest places. The evening was clear and both vessels should have been illuminated by running lights when they crashed near Lamma island off the southwestern coast of Hong Kong island.
The ferry collided with a boat owned by utility company Power Assets Holdings Ltd., which was taking its workers and their families to famed Victoria Harbor to watch a fireworks display in celebration of China’s National Day and mid-autumn festival.
Survivors told local television stations that the power company boat started sinking rapidly after the 8:23 p.m. collision. One woman said she swallowed a lot of water as she swam back to shore. A man said he had been on board with his children and didn’t know where they were. Neither gave their names.
The ferry did not sink, and apparently did not stop to help the doomed vessel. Local TV later showed images of the ferry, with its bow chewed up and chunks missing.
People desperate for word of their loved ones went from hospital to hospital, and ultimately to the morgue.
The government said 36 bodies had been recovered as of Tuesday morning, and at least one person appeared to be missing. 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.
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 accident is the deadliest to strike the territory since a 1996 high rise fire that killed 41, and the deadliest ferry accident since 88 people died during a typhoon in 1971.
Power Assets’ director of operations, Yuen Sui-see, said the company’s boat was carrying 121 passengers and three crew members, well below its capacity of more than 200.
“There was a boat that came in close and crashed,” he said. “After the crash, the other boat continued away. It didn’t stop.”




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