Two saved from capsized cruise ship

Divers have pulled two people alive from inside a capsized cruise ship in China and are preparing to rescue at least four more, state broadcaster CCTV said.

Two saved from capsized cruise ship

Divers have pulled two people alive from inside a capsized cruise ship in China and are preparing to rescue at least four more, state broadcaster CCTV said.

The rescue gave a small element of hope to an apparently massive tragedy with well over 400 people still missing on the Yangtze River.

Only 18 people are known to have survived the tragedy. The ship held 458 people, most of them elderly passengers.

At least seven swam ashore but others were rescued more than 12 hours after the ship went down, when search teams climbed aboard the upside-down hull and heard people calling out.

Footage showed rescuers in orange life vests climbing on the hull, with one lying down tapping a hammer and listening for a response, then gesturing downward.

Divers pulled out a 65-year-old woman and a man who had been trapped, CCTV said. It said four additional survivors had been found and were being rescued.

Other survivors include the captain and chief engineer. Five people were confirmed dead in the accident in Hubei province last night during a cruise from Nanjing to the south-west city of Chongqing, the broadcaster and Xinhua News Agency said.

Chinese premier Li Keqiang is reported to be travelling to the accident site. Xinhua reported that President Xi Jinping had ordered a work team of the State Council, the country's Cabinet, to rush to the site to guide the rescue work.

The overturned ship drifted about 3km (almost 2 miles) downstream before coming to rest close to the river shore, where choppy waters made the rescue difficult.

The drift was a good sign for rescuers because it meant there was enough air inside to give it buoyancy, which could mean there are air pockets for survivors to breathe, said Chi-Mo Park, a professor of naval architecture and ocean engineering at South Korea's Ulsan University.

"It all depends how much space there is inside the vessel," he said.

Xinhua quoted the captain and chief engineer as saying the ship sank quickly after being caught in a cyclone. The Communist Party-run People's Daily said the ship sank within two minutes. CCTV said the pair were under police custody.

CCTV said the four-level ship had been carrying 406 Chinese passengers, five travel agency employees and 47 crew members. The broadcaster said most of the passengers were 50 to 80 years of age.

Many of the ship's passengers started from Shanghai, taking a bus to Nanjing for the departure to Chongqing.

Relatives of passengers gathered in Shanghai at a travel agency that had booked many of the trips, and later headed to a government office to try to get more information.

Huang Yan, 49, an accountant in Shanghai, wept as she said she believes her husband, 49, and his father, in his 70s, were aboard the boat.

"Why did the captain leave the ship while the passengers were still missing?" she shouted. "We want the government to release the name list to see who was on the boat."

A group of about a dozen retired people from a Shanghai bus company were on the trip, said a woman who identified herself only by her surname, Chen. Among them, she said, were her elder sister and her husband, both 60, and their granddaughter, six.

"This group has travelled together a lot, but only on short trips. This is the first time they travelled for a long trip," she said.

The ship sank in the Damazhou waterway section, where the river is 15 metres (about 50 feet) deep.

Several rescue ships have been searching the waters and divers are deployed. Rescue personnel are said to be trying to determine whether they can right the sunken ship.

More than 50 boats and 3,000 people have been involved in search efforts.

The Eastern Star measured 251 feet long (76.5 metres) and 36 feet wide (11 metres) and was capable of carrying a maximum of 534 people, CCTV reported.

It is owned by the Chongqing Eastern Shipping Corp, which focuses on tourism routes in the popular Three Gorges river canyon region.

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