China's transport minister says
rescuers are in a "race against time" to find survivors among the
hundreds missing after a cruise ship capsized in bad weather on the
Yangtze River.
Thousands of rescuers worked through the night around the upturned hull of the Eastern Star in Hubei province.
Five people are confirmed dead and 15 more have been found alive from a ship that was carrying 456 people.
Frustrated relatives have been venting their anger at the lack of information.
The boat went down at about 21:30 local time on Monday evening (13:30 GMT). Most of the passengers are elderly Chinese tourists.
The survivors include the captain and chief engineer, both of whom have been taken into police custody.
The captain said the boat was caught in a cyclone and went down in minutes.
Transport Minister Yang Chuantang said: "It's a race against time. As
long as there's even a little hope, we will give it 100% and will
absolutely not give up."
Divers carried out at least two remarkable rescues from the upturned vessel on Tuesday, including one of a 65-year-old woman.
Hubei
military region commander Chen Shoumin told Chinese television divers
had taken breathing apparatus into the ship and spent five minutes
showing her how to use it.
"That old woman had a very strong will
and learned very fast, and after 20 minutes she surfaced to the water
and was rescued," Mr Chen said.
Analysis: John Sudworth, BBC News
No doubt for some of those on the Eastern Star it would have been the trip of a lifetime.
And
the Three Gorges Dam - a place of pilgrimage in its own right and a
powerful symbol of China's rising economic might, attracting about two
million visitors a year - now has its part to play in the rescue. The
dam's engineers have been ordered to reduce the water volume flowing
through the giant turbines.
The sinking of the Eastern Star will resonate widely.
A
boat full of everyday Chinese tourists - from grandmothers and
grandfathers down to the youngest listed passenger at just three years
old - has been lost in the waters of the country's best-loved river.
Three divers also found a 21-year-old man in a small compartment. They supplied diving apparatus and he swam out by himself.
Recalling
the rescue, diver Guan Dong said: "I swam back and forth three times,
and by the third time I felt somebody was up there above me. As soon as I
got out of the water, I noticed the trapped victim. It was pitch dark
inside, with just him inside the cabin and nobody else."
Three of the bodies were reportedly recovered in Yueyang, Hunan province, some 50km away.
Mr
Chen said: "We will do everything we can to rescue everyone trapped in
there, no matter they're still alive or not and we will treat them as
our own families."
One
survivor, tour guide Zhang Hui, told the Xinhua state news agency that
heavy rain had come through cabin windows and many passengers went into
the ship's hall to keep sheets and other items dry.
He said the ship then began to toss violently, to an angle of 45 degrees.
Mr
Zhang said he had "30 seconds to grab a life jacket" and tried to hold
on to what he could find to keep his head above water as the vessel
overturned.
He clambered out of a window in the torrential rain. "Wave after wave crashed over me; I swallowed a lot of water," he said.
Mr Zhang said he heard the
cries of at least a dozen other people in the water but after about 30
minutes, they all fell silent and he finally drifted into reeds and was
rescued.
Chinese television said 6in (150mm) of rain had fallen in
the region over the past 24 hours, with reported wind speeds of up to
80 mph (130 km/h).
The 76m-long, 2,200 tonne Eastern Star -
Dongfangzhixing in Chinese - had been carrying 405 Chinese passengers,
five travel agency employees and 46 crew members.
The vessel,
owned by the Chongqing Eastern Shipping Corporation, was travelling from
the eastern city of Nanjing to Chongqing in the south-west - a journey
of at least 1,500km (930 miles).
Relatives on those on board confronted officials in the cities of Shanghai and Nanjing.
Some family members had gone to
the Shanghai offices of the tour operator that handles the bookings,
Xiehe International Travel, but they were closed.
Wang Sheng, whose mother and father are on board, said: "I cried all the way here and I can't find anyone, the door is locked."
Relatives were then taken to government offices where they became frustrated at the lack of information and scuffles broke out.
Zhang
Yingli, 56, whose brother and wife were among the passengers, said:
"It's 4:30 now and we haven't heard anything from anyone except the
news. No-one has come to reassure us."
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