Russia says 128 may be dead in Volga river accident

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Russia said there was little hope of finding any more people alive on Monday after an overloaded tourist boat sank in the Volga River, killing as many as 128 people in Russia’s worst river accident in three decades. Eighty people were rescued Sunday after the Bulgaria, a double-decked river cruiser built in 1955, sank 3 km from shore in a broad stretch of the river in Tatarstan.
Emergency Situations Minister Sergei Shoigu told President Dmitry Medvedev that there was little hope of finding more survivors as divers brought up dozens of bodies from the vessel.
As many as 60 of the passengers may have been children, Russian media reported, and survivors said some 30 children had gathered in a room near the stern of the ship to play just minutes before it sank. “Practically no children made it out. There were many children on the boat, very many,” survivor Natalya Makarova said on state television. She said she had lost her grip on her daughter as they struggled to escape.
“We were all buried alive in the boat like in a metal coffin,” Makarova said, who escaped through a window. “I practically crawled up from the bottom. My 10-year-old child was with me, I held onto her as long as possible … I couldn’t hold on.” Medvedev said the sinking would not have happened if safety rules had been observed.
“According to the information we have today, the vessel was in poor condition,” Medvedev told a hastily convened meeting of senior ministers at his Gorki residence outside Moscow. “The number of old rust tubs which we have sailing is exorbitant.” Seeking to deflect possible criticism of the authorities ahead of the March presidential election, he called for a “total examination” of passenger transport vehicles in Russia and announced a nationwide day of mourning on Tuesday.