Friday, April 18, 2014

Ferry accident: Woman, 71, survives because stranger wouldn't give up on her By Madison Park, CNN April 18, 2014 --


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Ferry accident: Woman, 71, survives because stranger wouldn't give up on her

By Madison Park, CNN
April 18, 2014 -- Updated 1120 GMT (1920 HKT)
Shin Young Ja wants to find and thank the young man she says saved her life.
Shin Young Ja wants to find and thank the young man she says saved her life.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Shin hasn't heard from the friends she was traveling with
  • She too wouldn't have survived if a young man hadn't helped her
  • She wants to find and thank him
Mokpo, South Korea (CNN) -- Tethered to an IV drip, 71-year-old Shin Young Ja lies under a thin fleece blanket, nursing a broken back and wracked with survivor's guilt.
"How could it be that an old woman like me survived and all these young people are still in there?" she says. "It's such a shame."
Shin is one of 13 survivors recuperating at the Mokpo Hankook Hospital.
She hasn't heard from the four friends she was traveling with on board the passenger ferry Sewol when it capsized in the frigid waters of the Yellow Sea on Wednesday morning.
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"I don't think they made it out," Shin says, wiping away tears. "I didn't see their names on the list."
With each passing hour, hopes of finding more survivors have dimmed. By Friday, the death toll had climbed to 28. Rescue workers were scrambling furiously to find the roughly 270 who are still missing.
It's not lost on Shin that she could have been among the casualties had it not been for the determination of a young man who wouldn't give up when she did.
A young man she now wants to find and thank.
A few feet of difference
The only thing that separated Shin and her four friends was a matter of a few feet : where they sat on the third floor communal room of the ferry.
"The only reason I made it out was because I was on the other side (of the room) in front of the TV," she says.
Wednesday morning, after finishing breakfast, Shin sat away from her four friends to watch a soap opera. Then she heard screaming as people on one side of the room started "pouring down."
"Stacks of people" slid down the room as the boat tilted, she says
"So I grabbed onto a railing and they started sliding towards me."
Soon, she was swept along -- like a row of human dominoes.
"Everyone was swept to the one part of the hall."
The ship's announcement blared: "Do not move. Just stay where you are. It's dangerous if you move, so just stay where you are."
"If we don't move and do anything, it's more dangerous!" Shin recalls one of the men in the room say.
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The announcement also advised that everyone put on life jackets.
Then the water came "in a flash."
"I was just sitting there and watching the water rising," Shin said.
Not giving up
Ignoring the pain shooting through her back, Shin donned a life jacket and swam across the room to get to those who sought refuge on top of a cabinet.
She was too exhausted to climb up. A young man noticed her and clutched her hand.
"Hold on to me tightly!" he told her.
"I can't hold on," Shin recalls telling him. She was too exhausted.
But he wouldn't give up.
He grabbed her hand and tried to pull her up. When he failed, he tried again. And again.
On his third try, he pulled her atop the furniture.
A crew spotted them banging against the window. They shattered the glass and pulled them through.
'I am grateful'
She spoke briefly to the young man on the rescue boat. She doesn't know his name, only that he's from Gimpo, an area in the capital Seoul.
Her family wants to find the man -- "even if we have to put up placards around neighborhood," she says.
"I'm grateful. I want to thank him. I want to buy him a meal at least or hold his hand or give him a hug.
"What else can I do?"
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Part of complete coverage on
April 18, 2014 -- Updated 1147 GMT (1947 HKT)
First they said all passengers from the sunken South Korean ferry were rescued. Then they backtracked.
April 18, 2014 -- Updated 1118 GMT (1918 HKT)
Chances of finding survivors from the Sewol ferry are decreasing with each passing hour.
April 18, 2014 -- Updated 1120 GMT (1920 HKT)
Survivor Shin Young Ja, 71, wants to thank the man she says saved her life.
April 18, 2014 -- Updated 1121 GMT (1921 HKT)
Texts and social media posts from survivors trapped inside the stricken ferry had been faked.
April 18, 2014 -- Updated 1123 GMT (1923 HKT)
Family members of the missing passengers are pinning slim hopes on floundering air pockets.
April 18, 2014 -- Updated 1002 GMT (1802 HKT)
Through the unrelenting rain, with the biting winds whipping against her tear-stained face, Christine Kim stands on the cold, gray harbor.
April 17, 2014 -- Updated 1635 GMT (0035 HKT)
Some experts believe air pockets inside the stricken South Korean ferry could offer trapped passengers a chance for survival.
April 17, 2014 -- Updated 1135 GMT (1935 HKT)
As divers searched frigid waters off South Korea in low visibility, a dominant theory began to emerge about how the ferry sank.
April 18, 2014 -- Updated 0135 GMT (0935 HKT)
The Sewol is listed at 146 meters long and with a gross tonnage of almost 7,000 tons. It boasts five cargo and accommodation decks.
April 17, 2014 -- Updated 0024 GMT (0824 HKT)
CNN's Paula Hancocks reports on the massive search effort to find those trapped in the S. Korean Ferry.
April 16, 2014 -- Updated 1451 GMT (2251 HKT)
Relatives wait anxiously for missing passengers that were on board the Sewol.
April 17, 2014 -- Updated 1145 GMT (1945 HKT)
A passenger describes women screaming in the darkness. A father learns his child is trapped. A son tells his mother he loves her.
April 16, 2014 -- Updated 1659 GMT (0059 HKT)
New video is reportedly shot inside a ferry as it sinks off South Korea. CNN cannot confirm the authenticity.
April 16, 2014 -- Updated 1626 GMT (0026 HKT)
Dramatic footage shot from a rescue boat shows the frantic search to find survivors from a sunken ferry in South Korea.
April 16, 2014 -- Updated 1512 GMT (2312 HKT)
A rescued student told South Korea's YTN a loud bumping sound was heard before the ship began to list.
April 17, 2014 -- Updated 1137 GMT (1937 HKT)
The ferry that capsized on April 16 with 459 passengers onboard off the coast of South Korea was headed to Jeju Island.
April 16, 2014 -- Updated 1142 GMT (1942 HKT)
It was supposed to be a class trip to a resort island that's considered the Hawaii of Korea. Instead, the ferry capsized in the Yellow Sea.
March 25, 2014 -- Updated 1256 GMT (2056 HKT)
Here's a look at major ferry and ship sinking disasters throughout history.
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