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Death toll in Cebu ferry collision reaches 116

Philippine Navy and Philippine Coast Guard divers retrieve a body from the waters off the coast of Talisay city, Cebu province, in central Philippines Saturday Aug. 17, 2013, a day after a passenger ferry MV Thomas of Aquinas collided with a cargo ship Sulpicio Express Siete. AP FILE PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines鈥揇ivers over the weekend recovered another body from the sunken wreck of the MV St. Thomas Aquinas, bringing to 116 the death toll in the Aug. 16 collision between the passenger ship and the cargo vessel Sulpicio Express Siete off Talisay City in Cebu.

This was disclosed to the Philippine Daily Inquirer on Tuesday by Commander Armand Balilo, spokesperson of the Philippine Coast Guard, who said 鈥渄ivers are on stand-by to retrieve more bodies鈥 from the ill-fated ship.

鈥淎s of (Tuesday), 21 passengers and crew members of the ferry are still unaccounted for,鈥 he noted.

Search and rescue teams, composed of Coast Guard, Navy and Philippine National Police personnel, as well as private volunteers, earlier rescued a total of 733 passengers and crew members of the St. Thomas Aquinas.

Balilo, also chief of the PCG鈥檚 public affairs office, clarified the command had not terminated its search and retrieval operations.

鈥淭he diving operations were suspended last Friday to give way to preparations for the fuel oil siphoning operations to be conducted by a team hired by 2Go Travel,鈥 which operated the ferry, he said. The team includes an undisclosed number of 鈥渢echnical experts from Japan.鈥

He explained 鈥渙ur divers cannot operate while the oil siphoning is being conducted because it might put their lives in danger.鈥

The oil siphoning operations 鈥渨ill take more than a week,鈥 according to Balilo.

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