Twenty-six people went missing on May 28 after a ferry ran out of fuel and sank in bad weather off the coast of Indonesia, officials said, Report informs referring to Dawn.
The country’s search and rescue agency said the vessel was carrying 43 people when it capsized on May 26 in the Makassar Strait, the sea separating the islands of Sulawesi and Borneo.
News of the accident only reached officials on May 28, the local head of search and rescue Djuanidi, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name, told AFP.
“Seventeen people have been rescued alive by two tugboats that were passing by. We have deployed a rescue team to search for the missing others,” he said.
A group of 40 rescuers were at sea searching for survivors, Djuanidi added.
Marine accidents are common in Indonesia, a Southeast Asian archipelago of around 17,000 islands where safety standards are often lax.
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