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Thai rescuers carry tourists’ bodies aboard a navy vessel after it sank, as search and rescue operations continue in the seas off Phuket island, southern Thailand, on Saturday. Photo: EPA-EFE

‘I can hear my daughter screaming’: family of Thai boat disaster victims reveals chilling video

The video shows passengers tumbling down aisles without life vests on as the boat capsizes

Thailand

The family of a Chinese woman and her two children who were among the victims of a tourist boat disaster off the Thai resort island of Phuket shared ominous video of the chaotic scene on the boat right before it capsized, and said on Saturday they’re demanding “justice” from the Thai authorities.

The short video clip was taken at a section of the boat’s cabin, and shows the boat tilting, with rough waves seen through the windows. A passenger tumbles down the aisle as belongings fall on the cabin floor, and a voice is heard shouting.

As families mourn Thai tour boat disaster, calls for justice mount

Chen Wei, a businesswoman from China’s Chongqing province, noted that the video sent by her 47-year-old sister, Chen De Qiong, to the family’s WeChat group just before the boat capsized on Thursday showed strong waves and passengers not wearing life vests. She said the disaster was caused by human error and could have been avoided.

I can hear the voice of my daughter screaming. You can see that nobody wore life jackets
Xing Yong, relative of victim Chen De Qiong

“It’s shaking violently, and I’m feeling very dizzy,” Chen De Qiong wrote to her family. “I want to go ashore immediately,” she said in another message, adding that her 12-year-old son, also on the boat, was feeling ill.

Chen De Qiong, a doctor, arrived in Phuket on July 1 for a long-planned holiday with her son and 21-year-old daughter, Chen Wei said.

The body of the daughter, Xing Yu Jie, was recovered on Friday. Chen Wei and her brother-in-law Xing Yong arrived in Phuket on Saturday afternoon after an overnight flight from Chongqing.

He later identified the body of Chen De Qiong, which had been retrieved earlier in the day at a Phuket hospital. The son, Xing Hao Ran, was among the missing. Dozens died in the disaster.

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The boat was carrying 105 people – including 93 tourists, most of them from China, and 12 Thai crew – when it capsized and sank after it was hit by five-metre (16-foot) waves.

Rescuers were preparing to lift the sunken Phoenix on Sunday. Authorities have confirmed 41 deaths and said 15 people remained missing. Divers, including 17 from China, planned to retrieve a body from the sunken vessel on Sunday.

Aircraft and rescue ships extended the search area from Phuket to the island of Phi Phi and Phang Nga province. Teams were also searching the coastline on foot, officials said.

“I can hear the voice of my daughter screaming,” Xing Yong said while transiting at Kuala Lumpur airport. “You can see that nobody wore life jackets.”

Chen Wei said the boat company ignored warnings of bad weather and failed to take adequate measures to ensure passenger safety.

She said the video showed that glass windows in the boat cabin were sealed but they should have had latches so that they could be opened to allow passengers to swim out in an emergency.

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Despite rough waves, the boat did not stop and kept sailing, Chen said.

“Three out of a family with four members gone. How would you feel about it? Which family can bear such a blow?” she said.

Xing Yong, relative of a woman and her two children who were on the boat and drowned. Photo: AP

“There are loopholes everywhere that caused this tragedy … I just want to seek justice for my family. This is not a natural disaster. This tragedy is man-made and could have been avoided,” she added.

She said the holiday was planned as a celebration for her niece, who had just graduated from university, and her nephew, who is about to enter high school.

“A beautiful family gone like that, just like in a dream,” a distraught Chen said.

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“When my niece was found yesterday, she had no life signs – her passport helped identify her body,” she said. “Our biggest hope is to find my sister and nephew.”

Chen Wei had spoken to Associated Press on the plane. Upon arrival in Phuket, the family was ushered to the hospital, where Xing Yong identified the body of his wife through photographs.

Thailand’s Tourism Minister Weerasak Kowsurat said the government will “spare no one” as it investigates the accident, one of Thailand’s worst tourism-related disasters.

Police were investigating whether the double-decker Phoenix dive boat had been inspected by marine officials as required before it set sail on Thursday, Weerasak said.

The meteorological department had issued warnings for small ships not to go to sea that day but bigger boats like the Phoenix could sail after inspection.

Li Ming, who had five family members on board including two seven-year-old nieces, said he and a cousin flew to Phuket from China’s eastern Jiangsu province on Saturday after losing contact with their relatives.

Li said his two nieces died in the accident and three adult family members were still missing.

“There are so many family members back home waiting on our updates,” he said. “The hardest thing is waiting. This kind of pain most people just can’t understand.”

Additional reporting by Reuters

Thai Rescue workers carry the body of a victim on a stretcher after a boat capsized off the tourist island of Phuket. Photo: Reuters
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: pledge of justice for chinese victims in tour boat tragedy
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