logo
Nine dead as Chinese boats capsize in storm

Nine dead as Chinese boats capsize in storm

Irish Examiner05-05-2025

Four boats capsized in a sudden storm on a river in southwestern China, leaving nine dead and one missing, state media said on Monday.
More than 80 people fell into the Wu River when strong winds hit the scenic area in Guizhou province on Sunday afternoon, state broadcaster CCTV said.
Initial reports said two tourist boats had capsized, but CCTV and the official Xinhua News Agency said on Monday that four boats were involved.
It was not clear if any of the victims were on the other two boats.
Rescuers carrying out a search and rescue operation at the site (Liu Xu/Xinhua/AP)
The boats capsized after a sudden rain and hailstorm hit the Wu, a tributary of the Yangtze, China's longest river. In one video shared by state media, a man could be seen performing CPR on another person, while one of the vessels drifted upside down.
Guizhou's mountains and rivers are a major tourism draw, and many Chinese people are travelling during a five-day national holiday which was ending on Monday.
Chinese President Xi Jinping called for 'all-out efforts' to find the missing and care for the injured, Xinhua said on Sunday.
Mr Xi's administration has pushed to reduce the death toll in China's transportation sector, but overloading, poorly maintained vehicles and a lack of safety equipment have frustrated those efforts, particularly during major holidays.
CCTV said two of the capsized boats each had about 40 people on board and were not overloaded.
An eyewitness told state-owned Beijing News that the waters were deep, but some people had managed to swim to safety. They said the storm came suddenly and a thick mist obscured the surface of the river.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Suzanne Harrington: 'North Korea currently looks more enticing than the USA as a destination'
Suzanne Harrington: 'North Korea currently looks more enticing than the USA as a destination'

Irish Examiner

time2 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

Suzanne Harrington: 'North Korea currently looks more enticing than the USA as a destination'

Old friends of my partner invite us to stay at their beach house on Malibu – admittedly a very small beach house, but a beach house on Malibu nevertheless. The photos are breathtaking. Yet being of sound mind, we politely decline. Thanks, but no thanks. They laugh, nodding, rolling their eyes. They get it. Another friend, a freelancer with a UK passport, is offered a fat fee to fly to Atlanta for a weekend's work – he's a photographer - but also declines. He could do with the money, but finds the prospect of entering the US, even without a fancy camera in his bag, so stressful that he decides to forfeit the cash and stay at home. He says he keeps thinking of those German teenage backpackers, Maria Lepere and Charlotte Pohl, who were strip-searched, handcuffed, body scanned, and locked in a cell overnight in Honolulu for the crime of not having booked advance accommodation, before being deported. Now Irish students are cancelling planned cultural exchange trips to the US too, rather than potentially allowing the current regime's border guards to scrutinise their social media feeds or access their phones. Imagine uniformed meatheads scrolling through your private messages, like perverts sniffing through your knicker drawer. No thanks. This is not the kind of culture fit for any form of exchange. Meanwhile, Harvard is running free online courses to educate their own citizens on the basics of their own democratic structures. Offering ordinary Americans a kind of Democracy for Dummies as they sleepwalk over the cliff into dictatorship. The current US administration's ongoing propensity for picking fights with Harvard, women's reproductive rights, Canada, people of colour, Taylor Swift, people dependent on US foreign aid, Chinese students, trans people, migrants, the EU, Bruce Springsteen, Vladimir Putin, free trade, Oprah, Beyonce, facts, free speech, science, medicine, climate safeguarding, and probably gravity itself – while endorsing genocide, white supremacy, illegal deportations, medical quackery and the pardoning of criminals – continues to give the rest of us whiplash. The kind of whiplash you get when someone you'd long regarded as perhaps a slightly racist neighbour turns out to be a raging psychopath; culturally speaking, the abrupt speed of this about-turn is causing our necks to snap. We have our list of travel no-go zones, places our consulates advise us to proceed towards with great caution, or to swerve completely. You wouldn't book a sunshine holiday in South Sudan, pursue sex tourism in Iran, shoplift in Saudi. We know about the tricky places. We proceed accordingly, or don't proceed at all. The US was never, ever on that list; we were schooled to regard it as a place of adventure and opportunity, a place where you could make it, maybe even hit the jackpot. Now, thanks to its rapid slide from jackpot to jackboot, visiting America has become about as enticing as a colposcopy. Why would you want to go there, to contribute even a single dollar to its continued existence? As a destination, North Korea currently looks more enticing, for the simple reason that North Korea is not pretending to be anything other than what it is – a mad dictatorship overseen by a mad dictator. No offence Malibu, but right now I'd rather be a tourist in Pyongyang. Read More

Tourist damages ancient Chinese clay sculptures after jumping into display
Tourist damages ancient Chinese clay sculptures after jumping into display

The Journal

time4 days ago

  • The Journal

Tourist damages ancient Chinese clay sculptures after jumping into display

A DOMESTIC TOURIST climbed over a fence and jumped into a section of the world-famous display of China's Terracotta Army, damaging two ancient clay warriors, authorities said Saturday. The 30-year-old was visiting the museum housing the Terracotta Army in the city of Xi'an on Friday when he 'climbed over the guardrail and the protective net and jumped', public security officials said in a statement. The man surnamed Sun was found to 'suffer from mental illness' and the case is under investigation. Advertisement He 'pushed and pulled' the clay warriors and two were 'damaged to varying degrees', the statement said. He was 'controlled' by security personnel. The pit he jumped into is up to 5.4 metres (18 feet) deep, according to the museum's website. Built around 209 BC to stand guard over the tomb of the first emperor, the 8,000-strong Terracotta Army is one of China's most important archaeological discoveries and considered a symbol of ancient Chinese artistic and military sophistication. A major tourist attraction in Xi'an, capital of the northern province of Shaanxi, it has been a UNESCO world heritage site since 1987. A worker at the museum told news organisation AFP on Saturday that the display was open as usual.

‘It's been a great adventure' – Peter Bellew leaves Riyadh Air role after almost three years
‘It's been a great adventure' – Peter Bellew leaves Riyadh Air role after almost three years

Irish Independent

time4 days ago

  • Irish Independent

‘It's been a great adventure' – Peter Bellew leaves Riyadh Air role after almost three years

Mr Bellew has been with the airline, which is due to begin scheduled flights later this year, for almost three years and his current role was announced just over two years ago. Earlier this year, Riyadh Air postponed its launch date to later in 2025 due to supply chain issues at Boeing. The carrier is aiming to make Riyadh a hub for traffic between Asia, Africa and Europe. By 2030 its target is to serve 100 destinations. Riyadh Air, backed by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, will be the second flag-carrier in the country, with the government already owning airline Saudia. Riyadh Air has billions of dollars' worth of orders from Boeing and Airbus and is planning to have a fleet of up to 200 jets. Getting a new widebody airline licence, launching an airline, and building a super team was fascinating Last autumn, it placed an order for 60 Airbus A321 jets and it also has orders for Boeing Dreamliners. Riyadh Air's CEO is Tony Douglas, a former executive at Abu Dhabi's Etihad. Mr Bellew confirmed his departure from Riyadh Air. 'It has been a great adventure with Riyadh Air for the last three years,' he said. 'Getting a new widebody airline licence, launching an airline, and building a super team was fascinating. Being welcomed by the wonderful Saudi people was the highlight.' He said he is 'optimistic for the future' and that the 'journey is the reward'. Mr Bellew, from Co Meath, was CEO of Malaysia Airlines before rejoining Ryanair in 2017 as chief operations officer. He was hired by Michael O'Leary as Ryanair dealt with pilot unrest that ultimately resulted in company-wide union recognition. In 2019, Mr Bellew announced that he was leaving Ryanair and later said he would be joining EasyJet as its chief operating officer. Ryanair tried to enforce a non-compete clause, taking a case against Mr Bellew in the High Court. But Mr Bellew won, with the High Court ruling a non-compete clause in his contract was not enforceable. Mr Bellew resigned from EasyJet in 2022. Mr Douglas told Reuters last month that Riyadh Air would be interested in acquiring Boeing aircraft that Chinese carriers have opted not to take due to the trade war that erupted between the US and the rest of the world, should the opportunity arise..

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store