Update | Death toll from capsized Eastern Star in China climbs to nearly 400 as ship company offers apology
The death toll from the Eastern Star cruise ship disaster reached nearly 400 today, making it China’s deadliest boat disaster in nearly seven decades.
More bodies from the Eastern Star were found overnight and today, bringing the death toll to 396, Hu Kaihong, the vice director-general of the press bureau of the State Council Information Office, told a news conference.
Rescue teams searched for more bodies in the now-upright ship, which had capsized on the Yangtze River late on Monday. Authorities have attributed the accident to sudden, severe winds, but also have placed the surviving captain and his first engineer under police custody.
The boat had more than 450 people aboard, many of them tourists aged over 60, for a cruise from Nanjing to the southwestern city of Chongqing.
A total of 46 people remain missing, but a government spokesman said on Thursday that no new survivors are expected to be found.
The top and bottom floors of the four-level ship are the current focus of the search, but because of the level of damage it may take some time to complete, state television said.