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At Least 27 Dead After Tourist Boat Overturns Off Thailand

Thai rescue crews attend to passengers of a capsized tourist boat in rough seas at a port in Phuket on Thursday.
Kritsada Muenhawong
/
AFP/Getty Images
Thai rescue crews attend to passengers of a capsized tourist boat in rough seas at a port in Phuket on Thursday.

Updated at 6:50 a.m. ET Friday

A boat carrying more than 100 passengers, mostly Chinese tourists, overturned in rough waters off southern Thailand on Thursday, killing at least 27.

Phuket Gov. Norraphat Plodthong said 51 people had been rescued, according to The Phuket News. Later, Thai navy Rear Adm. Chareonpol Kumrasee told Reuters that "quite a lot of bodies" were found by divers inside the vessel's submerged hull. He said at least 27 were dead and 29 more were missing.

Strong winds continued to blow as rescue workers searched for survivors in the Andaman Sea off the popular island destination of Phuket, the newspaper reports.

Reuters said 93 of the passengers on the boat, called the Phoenix, were Chinese tourists.

Somjing Boontham, the captain of the Phoenix, was quoted in Thai media as saying his vessel was hit by a 13- to 16-foot wave, according to The Nation newspaper.

"Seawater flooded inside the vessel. The water pump was not fast enough to pump the water out and the boat began to lean," he said.

"I asked all passengers to check that their life jackets were secure. Two life rafts were deployed while nearby fishing boats were contacted for help," the captain said, according to the newspaper. "The boat sank very quickly. We did our best to keep the passengers calm and keep them safe during the chaos."

The Phoenix wasn't the only vessel in the area to capsize during Thursday's stormy weather. The Phuket Newssays another boat sank southeast of Phuket; officials said all 39 people aboard the Senalika were rescued.

As a precaution, the governor reportedly ordered all boats not to leave port overnight.

Meanwhile, off the coast of Indonesia, more than 30 people were confirmed dead after a ferry sank Tuesday near Selayar Island, according to local officials.

Video footage of the disaster showed passengers in orange life vests clinging to the side of the sinking ship, as others fell into the water.

After the ship began to take on water, the captain steered it close to the island and then crashed it in the shallows in a bid to save lives, according to media reports.

CNN reported that "as the boat began taking on water, the captain of the ship steered the vessel toward the nearby Selayar Island, and deliberately crashed it in the shallows to save as many lives as possible, according to Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, spokesman for Indonesia's disaster management agency."

The broadcaster said 155 people managed to swim to safety or were pulled from the water. When it sank, the boat was overcapacity, with cars, trucks and buses jammed on board at the time, CNN said.

Also Tuesday, Indonesian officials called off the search for three people presumed drowned in another ferry sinking. That boat was carrying 164 people when it went down on June 18 in a volcanic crater lake on the island of Sumatra, AP reports. More than 30 people died.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Amy Held is an editor on the newscast unit. She regularly reports breaking news on air and online.
Scott Neuman is a reporter and editor, working mainly on breaking news for NPR's digital and radio platforms.
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