Amid fading hopes of finding more survivors among the 456 people on board the ill-fated 'Eastern Star' that capsized in a freak tornado on Monday night, rescuers cut open the overturned hull at three places in a last-ditch effort.
A 55 cm X 60 cm rectangular hole was made on the bottom of the vessel and rescuers continued to cut through the floating hull into sections after stabilising it with cranes while the divers combed the 76-metre ship for over 370 people still missing, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
The death toll in the tragedy in the mighty Yangtze, Asia's longest river, today rose to 65 as rescuers retrieved another 39 bodies till morning.
Only 14 survivors, including the captain, have been found since the four-storey ship carrying 456 people, mostly elderly Chinese holiday-makers, capsized in a freak tornado on Monday, in what could be China's worst shipping disaster in decades.
Authorities have been trying to pacify angry relatives, some of whom staged a protest near the site and broke through police cordons for information.
"We will never shield mistakes and we'll absolutely not cover up (anything)," Xu Chengguang, Transport Ministry spokesman told reporters, adding a preliminary investigation had begun.
President Xi Jinping convened a special meeting of the ruling Communist Party's Politburo Standing Committee, China's highest decision-making body, this morning to discuss the rescue and ways to handle the tragedy's aftermath.
Information on the tragedy has so far been strictly- controlled and officials gave few details on the progress of the recovery efforts even as relatives of those missing remained anxious about their safety.
Questions persist over why the ship made a sudden turn 10 minutes before capsizing and whether a tornado recorded in the area at the time of the accident had directly hit the ship, Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported.
