Philippine navy divers battled strong ocean currents Sunday in a
desperate hunt for seven missing passengers of a ferry that sank with
dozens onboard.
The Lady of Mount Carmel ferry mysteriously went down in calm weather
on Friday about two kilometers (1.2 miles) from central Burias island,
killing two women passengers. Officials said 61 of the 70 people aboard
the vessel had been rescued.
Hopes of finding the remaining missing passengers were fading fast as
strong currents thwarted attempts by the navy divers to reach the
seabed, navy spokesman Lieutenant Commander Gerald Fabic told reporters.
He said there was a slim chance that the seven missing had drifted away to nearby islands.
However, he added there was also a probability that they were trapped inside the sunken vessel.
Fabic said navy and coastguard vessels would continue scouring areas around Burias island with the help of local fishermen until they were given orders to terminate the search.
Ferries are the main mode of transportation across the archipelago's more than 7,100 islands.
But the country's sea transport industry is notoriously disaster-prone, with sea accidents common due to poor safety standards.
The world's deadliest peacetime maritime disaster occurred near Manila in 1987 when a ferry laden with Christmas holidaymakers collided with a small oil tanker, killing more than 4,300 people.