Although all hope of finding any survivors has been extinguished, there is still anger and deep frustration among the relatives over the pace of the recovery operation off the southern island of Jindo.
Also, 121 people remained unaccounted for -- their bodies believed still trapped in the submerged vessel that capsized on April 16 with 476 people on board.
Making up the bulk of the passengers on the 6,825 tonne Sewol when it sank were 325 high school students -- around 250 of whom are either confirmed or presumed dead.
Last evening, a group of irate parents stormed into the Jindo office of the deputy head of the South Korean coastguard, and roughly manhandled him down to the island harbour.
He was kept there most of the night, sitting on the ground, along with coastguard chief Kim Seok-Kyun and Marine Minister Lee Ju-Young, while the relatives accused them of lying about the recovery operation and demanded they bring in more resources.
The bereaved families have said they want all the remaining bodies removed from the ferry before the weekend -- a demand that is unlikely to be met, especially with a bad weather front moving in.
"We know that weather conditions will worsen considerably and currents will become stronger from Saturday," a coastguard spokesman told a press briefing.
An earlier coastguard statement said storm warnings could be issued tomorrow or Sunday for the area around the rescue site. Rescuers have not found a single survivor since 174 people were pulled to safety on the day of the accident.
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