10 dead, 8 missing after South Korean fishing boat capsizes - Los Angeles Times
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10 dead, 8 missing after South Korean fishing boat capsizes

South Korean coast guard ships sail Sept. 6 to search for missing passengers who were on aboard a fishing boat that capsized off the resort island of Jeju.

South Korean coast guard ships sail Sept. 6 to search for missing passengers who were on aboard a fishing boat that capsized off the resort island of Jeju.

(Park Ji-ho / Associated Press)
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Ten people died and eight others were missing after a boat carrying passengers on a fishing trip capsized off South Korea’s southern coast, officials said Sunday.

Three people were rescued and flown to a hospital with injuries that weren’t considered life-threatening, coast guard officers said on condition of anonymity because of agency rules. Dozens of ships searched the area for survivors.

The 9.8-ton boat, Dolphin, lost communication with another boat on Saturday evening and was found Sunday morning north of the resort island of Jeju, officials said.

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Coast guard officers said the exact cause of the incident was still unknown, and that weather conditions at the time weren’t threatening.

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A survivor said the boat capsized after being caught by nets for fish farms, according to a coast guard statement.

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Another survivor, identified only by the surname Park, awoke to find the captain telling the passengers to get out as the boat filled with water, according to Yonhap news agency. Park said that some people clung to the capsized boat for more than 10 hours, but that others disappeared in the strong waves before rescuers arrived, Yonhap said.

Twenty-one people were believed to have been on board the boat, including the captain, who was among the 10 dead. The rest were passengers on a fishing trip, not professional fishermen, according to the coast guard.

A document listed 22 expected passengers, but officials have found that four of them did not actually board the vessel and that three unlisted people embarked on it, the coast guard officers said.

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More than 70 coast guard, navy and civilian ships searched the nearby waters along with five aircraft, the coast guard statement said. The boat had left Chuja Island, northwest of Jeju Island, on Saturday evening to return to a southwestern town on the mainland, it said.

South Korea is still dealing with grief and anger over a maritime disaster last year that killed more than 300 people, mostly high school students, when a ferry sank off the southern coast. Critics blamed lax government oversight and the country’s poor safety culture in part for that sinking.

After the latest incident, President Park Geun-hye, heavily criticized for alleged incompetence over last year’s ferry sinking, ordered her government to “do everything possible for the search and rescue of the missing” and to keep the public informed about government efforts to deal with the incident, according to her office.

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