Monday, June 1, 2015

Boat with more than 450 people aboard sinks in China’s Yangtze River

Rescue workers carry a boat as they conduct a search, after a ship sank in the Jianli section of the Yangtze River, Hubei province, China, June 2, 2015. (Chen Zhuo/ Yangzi River Daily/REUTERS)

Boat with more than 450 people aboard sinks in China’s Yangtze River

A small cruise ship sank overnight in China’s Yangtze River during a storm, leaving at least one person dead and nearly 450 people missing, most of them elderly, state media said Tuesday. Ten people were rescued, the state media reports said.
Search teams heard sounds coming from within the partially submerged ship about 12 hours after it went down, state broadcaster CCTV said, but it was not immediately clear whether they amounted to signs of life among the missing.
The boat was travelling from Nanjing upstream to the southwestern city of Chongqing when it sank Monday night in Hubei province, the report said.
The official Xinhua News Agency quoted the captain and chief engineer, who were both rescued, 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 four-level ship had been carrying 406 Chinese passengers, five travel agency employees and 47 crew members. The broadcaster said 10 people were rescued and that one person was confirmed dead.
The broadcaster said most of the passengers were 50 to 80 years of age.
The ship sank in the Damazhou waterway section, where the river is 15 metres (about 50 feet) deep. The Yangtze is the world’s third-longest river and sometimes floods during the summer monsoon season.
CCTV video footage of the river showed calm waters Tuesday morning, with dozens of rescue personnel in bright orange vests gathered on the shore. Several rescue ships were searching the waters, and divers had been deployed.
The channel said seven of the survivors swam to shore and alerted authorities to the sinking.
More than 50 boats and 3,000 people were 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. The company could not be reached for comment.
CCTV reported that 6 inches (150 millimeters) of rain had fallen in the region over the past 24 hours. Local media reported winds reached 80 mph (130 kph) during the accident.
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.

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B.C. transit votes are in, key players planning for either outcome

B.C. transit votes are in, key players planning for either outcome

As the counting of ballots begins in Canada’s first public vote on whether to finance expanded transit with a new tax, key players are considering what they would do whether it is the Yes side or the No side that wins.
“We have been thinking about how we would make sure we support either outcome as a province,” Premier Christy Clark told reporters last week.
“Whatever happens, people in the Lower Mainland want more transit. I think everyone agrees with that. The question they are being asked right now is how do they want to pay for that transit.”
Voting ended Friday in an exercise that saw Lower Mainland voters asked whether they would approve a 0.5-per-cent increase to provincial sales tax applicable in Metro Vancouver to help fund $7.5-billion in transit expansion over the next decade to help move people as the region’s population increases.
Results are expected later in June, says Don Main, communications manager for Elections BC. He said more time is needed to count the votes because the agency is working with fewer staff than would be deployed for a provincial election.
On the Yes side of the transit debate have been the B.C. government, most of the region’s mayors, environmentalists, unions and the business community.
The No side, energized by concerns about mismanagement in TransLink, the regional transit authority, has largely been personified by Jordan Bateman, B.C. head of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
Ms. Clark promised the vote back in 2013 when her B.C. Liberals were facing a tough fight against the NDP in that spring’s provincial election.
Ms. Clark, who divides her time between her Kelowna-area riding and a residence in the Lower Mainland, said she had voted Yes. But, she added, “I’ve stopped making hockey and election predictions so I’m not going to predict the outcome.”
While the Premier is not making a bet, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said he is “cautiously optimistic” voters would vote Yes.
Although a Yes result would provide key funding, Metro Vancouver mayors would still have to seek funding from Ottawa and make use of already committed provincial funding to pay for buses and other items on the transit agenda.
One key piece of transit Vancouver is hoping a Yes vote would help fund is a new subway across several kilometres of the city’s Broadway corridor.
The last data released May 27 said the turnout was about 45 per cent – or 698,900 of more than 1.56 million registered voters. No further update is expected until the release of the final results.
“It’s certainly a decent turnout, higher than municipal elections,” Mr. Robertson told a news conference when asked about the numbers. “I’m still cautiously optimistic. I think it will be an anxious wait until the ballot count is done.”

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