
Manila: Worried relatives wept on Sunday as
they awaited news of more than 740 passengers
and crew aboard a ferry that capsized as Typhoon
Fengshen swamped the Philippines, killing
more than 80 people and submerging entire
communities.
A rescue ship battling
huge waves and strong winds reached the
MV Princess of Stars, one end jutting out
of the water upside-down, more than 24 hours
after it lost radio contact Saturday. But
there was no sign of survivors, and only
three people who were aboard the ferry were
known to have reached shore alive.
''They haven't seen
anyone. They're scouring the area. They're
studying the direction of the waves to determine
where survivors may have drifted,'' coast
guard spokesman Lt. Senior Grade Arman Balilo
said.
Villagers found four
bodies—including a man and a woman
who bound themselves together—along
with children's slippers and life jackets
that washed ashore nearby.
The national death
toll included 59 people who drowned in the
central province of Iloilo, with another
40 missing, Governor Neil Tupaz said.
''Almost all the towns
are covered by water. It's like an ocean,''
Tupaz said, adding thousands have been displaced
in the province that is home to 1.7 million
people.
TV footage showed rescuers
using a long rope across raging floodwaters
in an Iloilo village to pluck three residents
to safety from atop a partly engulfed van.
In a nearby village, residents pulled a
body from a muddy field then laid it beside
another they found earlier.
The ferry initially
ran aground a few km off central Sibuyan
island on Saturday, then capsized, said
Mayor Nanette Tansingco of Sibuyan's San
Fernando.
At least three survivors
were found in Sibuyan's Mabini village and
police were ordered to go there. But all
the roads to the village, where many houses
were washed away by huge waves, were blocked
by toppled trees, Tansingco told DZBB radio.
She appealed for food,
medicine and formalin to embalm bodies,
apparently expecting many deaths in her
town. The upturned ferry could be seen from
her town, she said.
The typhoon lashed
the central Philippines for about four hours
Saturday, setting off landslides and floods,
knocking out power and blowing off roofs.
Packing sustained winds
of 120 km per hour and gusts of up to 150
km per hour, the typhoon shifted course
on Sunday to the northwest and battered
Manila at dawn, dumping heavy rain on the
capital. Major streets were flooded, and
numerous traffic lights were out.
Rescue vessels aborted
an initial attempt Saturday to get to the
23,824-ton ferry. Efforts resumed in stormy
weather Sunday, coast guard chief Vice Admiral
Wilfredo Tamayo said, although the churning
sea kept smaller vessels away. Four coast
guard ships and three from the navy were
deployed, and the air force was asked to
send aircraft as soon as the weather clears.
The ferry, with 626
passengers and 121 crew members on board,
was ''dead in the water'' after its engine
failed around noon Saturday, Tamayo said.
About two dozen relatives
trooped to the Manila office of Sulpicio
Lines, some quietly weeping as they waited
for news about their loved ones.
''I'm very worried.
I need to know what happened to my family,''
said Felino Farionin, his voice cracking.
His wife, son and four in-laws were on the
ferry.
President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo directed the defense department and
local governments to be on standby for relief
and rescue missions before she left for
the United States late Saturday.
Arroyo later talked
to officials in a teleconference aired live
on nationwide radio, scolding coast guard
officials for allowing the ferry to leave
Manila late Friday despite the bad weather.
Ferries are the main
form of inter-island transportation in the
sprawling Philippine archipelago, site of
the world's worst peacetime maritime disaster
when the ferry MV Dona Paz sank in 1987,
killing more than 4,341 people.