The
Eastern Star is upright once again, looking almost normal with its
bottom resting on the water and its deck and cabins clear above it.
The
ship's positioning Friday was a step forward in the days-long nightmare
playing out on a section of the Yangtze River that flows through Hubei
province. It means answers should be easier to come by as to why the
Eastern Star capsized Monday night and what can be done to prevent
similar tragedies in the future.
It also means closure could be coming soon to hundreds of families.
By
6:20 p.m. (6:20 a.m. ET) Friday, the body count stood at 103, according
to Chinese state media. That's a tick up from previous days, but still a
fraction of the 456 passengers who were on board, many of them in their
60s and 70s.
Fourteen of them
survived. But rescuers have had no luck since Tuesday, when a
21-year-old sailor and 65-year-old woman were plucked from the water.
The chances of more miracles have dwindled with each passing day. And the salvage process has begun; CNN
.
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