At least 20 people have been killed and more than a dozen missing after a ferry boat capsized in Burma’s Ayeyarwaddy delta.
Thirty people were rescued after the ferry capsized in the Ngawun river at around 7.30pm on Friday, police officer Nay Lin Tun said.
About 66 people were on the ferry, which capsized after colliding with a boat carrying gravel. The ferry was going from Pathein to Yakhinekone village.
Most of the ferry’s passengers were returning from a wedding ceremony.
‘Altogether 16 women and four men were killed in the boat accident,’ regional MP Aung Thu Htwe told AFP Saturday morning.
‘We estimate nine people are still missing,’ he said, adding that some 30 people had been rescued alive the night before.
The boat was believed to be carrying between 60 and 80 people when it sank, according to state media and a local police officer.
‘They were crossing to the other side of the river after attending a wedding in Pathein. Most of them were relatives from the same village,’ said the police officer, who requested anonymity.
Both boats were unlit when they collided in the middle of the river.
Local authorities and red cross workers resumed the search operation at first light.
Fatal boat accidents are common in Myanmar, where many people living along its flood-prone rivers rely on often overcrowded ferries for transport.
It often takes several days before all of the bodies are retrieved.
Last October 73 people, including many teachers and students, died when their packed vessel capsized in central Myanmar on the Chindwin River.
Earlier that year in April at least 21 people, including nine children, died after their boat sank off the coast of Myanmar’s western state of Rakhine.
Around 60 people died the year before, in March 2015, when their ferry went down in the same treacherous waters off of Rakhine.
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