Danube boat accident: More bodies found as vessel is raised in Hungary

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Four more bodies have been recovered after salvage crews raised the wreck of a tourist boat that sank on the Danube in Budapest last month.

 

A floating crane raised The Mermaid to the surface, allowing divers to enter.

 

The boat was carrying South Korean tourists when it was hit by a cruise ship and capsized, killing 20 passengers and leaving eight missing.

 

Recovery efforts by Hungarian and South Korean teams have been hampered by high water levels in the Danube.

 

Footage from the scene on Tuesday morning showed the cabin and upper deck of the boat emerge from the water and divers carry out a search for victims still trapped inside.

 

The four bodies recovered have not been formally identified, but they are believed to be those of the boat’s Hungarian captain and three South Koreans including a six-year-old girl – the only child to die in the accident.

 

The rest of the 70-year-old boat was then slowly brought to the surface with pumps removing water from the hull to stabilise it.

 

One of the divers, Zoltan Papp, said attaching straps to the hull of the boat had been difficult because visibility in the muddy, fast-flowing river had been as low as 10cm (4in) at times.

 

“It was like being in heavy snowfall or fog,” he told Reuters news agency.

 

At one point in Tuesday’s operation, a member of the recovery crew fell into the swollen river and had to be rescued by colleagues.

 

The Viking Sigyn cruise ship struck the Mermaid just after 21:00 local time (19:00 GMT) on 29 May as both vessels passed under the Margaret Bridge.

 

Seven of the 35 people on board were rescued and several bodies quickly recovered, but others were swept away in the swollen river or trapped inside the boat.

 

Police said the boat had sunk within seven seconds of the collision.

 

“The current was so fast and people were floating away,” one survivor, identified only by her surname Jung, told South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.

 

More bodies were recovered in the following days, with one pulled from the Danube more than 100km (60 miles) downstream. Nineteen South Korean tourists and a Hungarian crewman are so far confirmed to have died.

The disaster was the worst on the Danube – Europe’s second-longest river – in more than 50 years.