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Published 20 Apr, 2014 07:25am

Hopes fade for 269 on sunken S. Korean ship

JINDO (South Korea): Divers began to locate bodies on Saturday inside a submerged South Korean ferry as the detained captain defended his decision to delay evacuation of the ship when it capsized nearly four days ago with 476 people on board.

Arrested captain Lee Joon-Seok was charged with negligence and failing to secure the safety of passengers in violation of maritime law.

Thirty-three people have been confirmed dead in the disaster, but 269 are still missing -- most of them children on a high school holiday trip.

As the arrests were being made, dive teams who had spent two days vainly battling powerful currents and near zero visibility, finally penetrated the passenger decks of the 6,825-ton Sewol.

“Civilian divers spotted three bodies through a window,” a senior coastguard officer said.

They attempted to break through the window but failed and had to surface without retrieving the bodies, he explained in a briefing to relatives of the missing.

The relatives, who have been sleeping in a gymnasium on Jindo island near the scene of the disaster, were shown video footage from one dive.

Even with a powerful underwater flashlight, visibility was measured in inches as the diver was seen groping his way blindly along the side of the ship with the help of a pre-attached rope.

Additional ropes were being attached ahead of a major push to get more rescuers inside.

“Instead of dispatching two divers at a time, we’re going to send up to 10,” said senior coastguard officer Choi Sang-Hwan.

Earlier Saturday captain Lee and the two crew members were paraded before TV cameras at their arraignment, dressed in dark raincoats with their hoods pulled up and their heads bowed.

Captain defends evacuation: Questioned as to why passengers had been ordered not to move for more than 40 minutes after the ship first foundered, Lee insisted it was a safety measure.

“At the time a rescue ship had not arrived. There were also no fishing boats or other ships around to help,” Lee said.

“The currents were very strong and the water was cold at that time in the area.

“I thought that passengers would be swept far away and fall into trouble if they evacuated thoughtlessly,” he added.

Experts have suggested many more people might have escaped if they had moved to reach evacuation points before the ship listed sharply and water started flooding in.—AFP

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