Ill-fated Ferry could have been going too fast: Report

Sewol had 476 passengers & crew on board, including 339 children and teachers

Update: 2014-04-22 04:21 GMT
South Korean rescue team members work to rescue passengers believed to have been trapped in the sunken ferry Sewol near the buoys which were installed to mark the vessel in the water off the southern coast near Jindo, (Photo: AP)

Jindo (South Korea): It should have been plain sailing for a South Korean ferry carrying hundreds of children and their teachers on an outing to the sub-tropical island of Jeju, an annual trip for Danwon High School.

The Sewol had 476 passengers and crew on board, including 339 children and teachers. It had an experienced captain, was navigating well-known waters and had passed its annual inspections since it was bought second hand in 2012 by Chonghaejin Marine Co. Ltd.

But prosecutors believe the vessel capsized after turning at too high a speed. Sixty-four people are known to have died and 238 are missing, presumed dead, mostly children. In an arrest document, the captain was charged with undertaking an “excessive change of course without slowing down” while traversing a channel off South Korea’s southwestern tip.

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