An arrest warrant has been issued for the captain of the ferry that
sank off the coast of South Korea, an accident that killed 28 people and
left nearly 270 missing.
Two other crew members also face arrest, a spokesman for the joint prosecutor and police investigators said Friday.
The spokesman did not provide any further detail.
The cause of the accident
still isn't known. But a Korean prosecutor said the captain, Lee Joon
Suk, wasn't in the steering room when the ship started to sink; a third
mate was at the helm.
"It is not clear where
(the captain) was when the accident occurred, although it is clear that
he was not in the steering room before the actual accident happened,"
state prosecutor Jae-Eok Park said Friday.
The captain was one of at least 179 people rescued soon after Wednesday's sinking.
In a tragic twist, one of
those rescued, a high school vice principal who was on board the ferry
along with more than 300 students, was found hanging from a tree, police
said.
Kang Min Kyu, 52, vice principal of Ansan Danwon High School, was among the first survivors to be rescued.
Police said he apparently
hanged himself with a belt from a tree near a gymnasium in Jindo, where
distraught relatives of missing passengers have been camping out.
Meanwhile, divers raced to reach the hundreds of people still believed to be inside the ship.
Divers breached the hull
of the sunken ferry Friday, and two managed to enter the second deck --
the cargo deck, the South Korean coast guard said. But rough waters
forced them back out again. They didn't find any bodies in their brief
search.
"The guide line that
links the sunken ship and the rescue vessel has been cut off," the coast
guard said. "Still, the entrance into the ship is open, and we plan to
resume operation to enter the ship."
It's a race against time.
Hopes of finding the
missing dimmed further when the entire boat became submerged Friday.
Until then, part of the ship's blue-and-white hull was still poking out
of the frigid waters of the Yellow Sea.
On top of that, divers must contend with fierce winds and rough waters.
"There are heavy
currents in the area. So the vessel itself is not stable in the water.
So you are, by default, putting divers at risk," U.S. Navy Capt. Heidi
Agle told CNN's Wolf Blitzer. The U.S. Navy is assisting with the South
Korean search.
Relatives of passengers
expressed increasing disgust and anger about the lack of explanation
from the captain and the pace of the rescue effort.
Some have waited for days in the cold rain at a harbor in Jindo, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the sunken boat.
Others camped out at a
nearby gymnasium and auditorium, desperate to hear any news of their
loved ones. Relatives overcome with emotion howled and screamed, but to
no avail.
"Hurry up, find it faster!" one woman wailed.
Several relatives collapsed. At least two women were taken away on stretchers.
Part of the frustration stems from the conflicting information reported by officials.
In the hours after the
sinking, several analysts speculated the ferry may have veered off
course and struck an object. But the South Korean Oceans and Fisheries
Ministry said Thursday that it had approved the boat's intended route,
and the actual course did not deviate significantly.
Yet Kim Soo Hyeon, the
chief of South Korea's Yellow Sea Maritime Police Agency, later said it
appears the ship did deviate from its planned route but did not appear
to have hit a rock.
Adding to the pain for
families, police said texts and social media messages claiming to be
from missing passengers turned out to be fake.
"We will investigate people sending out these messages," said Lee Sung Yoon, head of the combined police and prosecution team.
He said authorities will go after those behind the hoaxes and will "punish them severely."
Cranes arrive
The coast guard said workers continued to pump air into the hull of the submerged ship Friday, but could not stop its descent.
Any hope for survival
largely hinges on whether passengers may be floundering in air pockets
within the ship. Such cases are not unheard of.
In May 2013, a tugboat
capsized off the coast of West Africa. Rescuers pulled out a man from
100 feet below the surface who survived 2½ days inside a 4-square-foot
air pocket.
That's one reason family members aren't ready to give up hope just yet.
"When they're in a small
compartment ... with an air bubble, they really have to stay calm and
breathe shallow and conserve the oxygen in that space," former Navy
diver Bobbie Scholley told CNN.
But in the case of the South Korean ferry, there's another challenge to contend with: time and temperature.
"Absolutely, there could
be areas in there where there is breathable air," said Mike Dean, the
U.S. Navy deputy director for salvage and diving. "But the trouble right
now is the temperature and getting people to them."
Adding to the relatives'
despair was the arrival of three 3,600-ton seaborne cranes. They fear
the cranes' presence means the mission is shifting from a search to a
salvage effort.
A fourth crane will arrive later.
A coast guard official assured families that nothing would be done to jeopardize the safety of possible survivors.
"Let me be clear," Kim told journalists. "There won't be any salvaging work done against the will of the bereaved families."
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