Boy survives Vietnam tourist boat sinking that killed dozens by sheltering in air pocket
The 10-year-old had been traveling with his family in Vietnam's famed Ha Long Bay when the vessel they were sailing on became caught in a sudden storm. Trapped in the boat as it capsized, the boy found refuge in an underwater air pocket, where he stayed and waited for help.
He was eventually found by rescue teams relatively unharmed, although he was suffering from mental distress. He was warmed up and transferred to a nearby hospital, local outlet VietnamNet reported.
'Everything happened so fast,' the boy said. 'I tried to get out, and then the soldiers rescued me.'
Search and rescue efforts are continuing for missing passengers and crew after sightseeing ship the Wonder Sea capsized in a squall on Saturday but have been hampered by bad weather.
At least 35 people are confirmed dead from the sinking, state media reported, revising down an earlier toll but warning that it could still rise further. Vietnam News Agency said there were 53 passengers and crew on board and 10 people had been rescued. Four people remain missing.
Another survivor, a 36-year-old Vietnamese man, described escaping the overturned boat by dumping his life jacket and swimming through an underwater window.
Fire extinguisher salesman Dang Anh Tuan described the moment the vessel suddenly capsized during bad weather, leaving little time for those on board to react.
'It rained for about 15 minutes, and then the boat started to shake vigorously, tables and chairs were jostled around and seconds later the boat overturned,' Tuan told the Associated Press.
He said that the boat quickly filled with water and he lost all orientation.
'I tried to breathe. But more water came in. I took a deep breath, got rid of my life vest and dove down. I saw a streak of light and followed it to swim out, escaping the boat, and then I climbed on the overturned boat to look for help,' he said.
Tuan, along with several others who had been on board, clung onto the overturned boat and waited for another two hours in pouring rain until emergency crews arrived.
He'd been holidaying in Vietnam's popular tourist bay with 11 university friends. Only three of their group survived.
VN Express reported that the Wonder Sea was caught in a storm around 1.30 p.m. local time (2.30 a.m. ET), which caused it to capsize.
Most of the passengers were from the Vietnamese capital Hanoi and traveling as families, according to VN Express, which reported the eldest passenger as 53 years old and the youngest as just 3. Over 20 children were on board, VNExpress said.
The capsize reportedly happened near the Dau Go Cave – one of the largest in the bay.
Halong Bay is a popular tourist hotspot and a UNESCO world heritage site comprising about 1,600 limestone islands and islets.
CNN's Eve Brennan, Max Saltman and TuAnh Dam contributed reporting.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Rains and Broken Roads Complicate Flood Rescue in Indian Himalayas
Harsh rains, collapsed roads and uprooted electrical lines have complicated ongoing rescue efforts in the Indian Himalayas, officials said Wednesday, after flash floods killed at least four people and left dozens missing the day before. Confirming the precise death toll may take up to a week, officials said, warning that the number of casualties could rise substantially. On Wednesday, Pushkar Singh Dhami, the chief minister of the northern state of Uttarakhand, told an Indian news outlet that at least 190 people had been rescued from the wreckage, after a muddy torrent of water ripped into the village of Dharali the day before, bulldozing buildings and burying the area in mud. The town's central marketplace was destroyed, according to the district office managing the disaster relief, and roads were damaged and transportation was difficult. People in the area were evacuated to shelter sites, and many families were anxiously waiting to find out the fate of relatives caught in the natural disaster, the office added. Indian Army forces, equipped with tracking dogs, drones and earth-moving equipment, have supplemented the rescue effort. Images of the effort published by Reuters show teams using ziplines to rescue marooned victims and deploying heavy machinery to move large boulders and pieces of debris. The floods and landslide caused large boulders to block narrow mountain roads that lead into Dharali, and ripped mobile phone towers and electric lines from the ground, making it difficult to establish communication with the area. Those factors, along with strong, continued rains, have made it harder for rescue workers to quickly locate missing people, officials said. Uttarakhand is prone to floods and landslides. In 2013, the state suffered its deadliest floods, which left over 6,000 people dead. The monsoon rains this year have also created significant damage in the neighboring state of Himachal Pradesh. Nearly 200 people have been killed over the past six weeks in monsoon-related disasters, according to official data, and 300 others have been injured and three dozen missing.
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
India flash floods: Dozens believed to be trapped under rubble as at least 11 soldiers reported missing
Rescue teams are working to find dozens of missing people after flash floods struck a Himalayan village in northern India. At least four people have been killed and buildings swept away after intense rains rushed down narrow mountains into Dharali, a mountain village in Uttarakhand state, on Tuesday. Local official Prashant Arya said that around "a dozen hotels have been washed away and several shops have collapsed". Conditions 'extremely challenging' - defence spokesperson Four bodies have been recovered as of Wednesday, as army and disaster force teams were still searching for dozens believed to be trapped under rubble. Dilip Singh, a disaster management official, said the "search for others is still under way" but added that adverse conditions, damaged roads and rough terrain were hampering rescue efforts. Pushkar Singh Dhami, the chief minister of Uttarakhand state, told the ANI news agency that around 130 people were rescued by Tuesday night. He added that army helicopters were on standby to provide supplies to those stranded. Meanwhile, at least 11 army soldiers were reported missing from a camp in nearby Harsil after the floods. Defence spokesperson Lt Col Manish Srivastava said that the "conditions are extremely challenging, but our teams are staying put". Village 'wiped out,' says local politician Lokendra Bisht, a local politician who runs a homestay in the area, told the Associated Press that the flood waters came so fast that "there was nothing anyone could do". He added: "The whole of Dharali village was wiped out." Geologist SP Sati also told the press agency that the village "sits on a ticking time bomb" and "is in a highly fragile zone". Read more from Sky News: Sudden and intense downpours - known as cloudbursts - have become increasingly common in Uttarakhand state. The Himalayan region, in India's far north, bordering Nepal and China, is already prone to flooding and landslides in the monsoon season. Experts say cloudbursts have increased in recent years, partly due to climate change, while damage from the storms also has increased because of unplanned development in mountain regions. Dharali experienced similar flooding in 1864, in 2013 - when more than 6,000 people died across northern India after a cloudburst event - and in 2014.
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rescuers pull drivers from submerged cars in southern China floods
STORY: :: August 4, 2025 :: Dongguan, China :: Rescuers help people to escape flooded cars in southern China Rescue crews raced on Wednesday (August 6) to clear debris and flooded roads as southern China braced for more extreme rainfall and spreading infection after some of the worst downpours this century, as East Asian monsoon rains peak. Rescue crews in Guangdong scrambled to open drains and pump water away from urban areas, state media said, as the intense rain set off mudslides and felled trees on highways, tearing away road surfaces to expose cabling and other infrastructure.