At Least 2 Dead, Many Missing In South Korean Ferry Accident

International Business Times

Published Apr 16, 2014 03:25AM ET

Updated Apr 16, 2014 04:00AM ET

south

By Suman Varandani - At least 2 people are dead and many are still missing after a ferry carrying more than 470 people, most of them school children, sank off South Korea’s southern coast Wednesday, leading to a massive rescue operation involving 34 naval, coastguard and civilian ships, and 18 helicopters.

Two coast guard officers reportedly said that a 27-year-old woman named Park Ji-yeong and another unidentified male student had died. South Korean officials reportedly said that 368 passengers had been rescued so far, adding that the rescue operation was still underway, but no further details were revealed. The ferry, identified as the Sewol, which was reportedly owned and operated by privately-held Chonghaejin Marine Co., was carrying the passengers and 150 vehicles to Jeju island, about 60 miles south of the Korean peninsula.

There also was some confusion regarding the exact number of people on board the ferry and the number of missing people with reports citing different numbers. According to a Reuters report, the ferry was carrying 475 people, while a Los Angeles Times report said that there were 477 people on board the ferry and 295 people were missing.

"As the ferry was shaking and tilting, we all tripped and bumped into each another," Lim Hyung-min, a student, told YTN, a local news network, after being rescued, according to USA Today, adding that some people were bleeding. The water "was so cold. … I was hurrying, thinking that I wanted to live," Lim said.