South Korea said today it has ended underwater searches for the remaining missing people from April's ferry disaster that killed more than 300 people in one of the country's deadliest disasters in decades.
The announcement came hours before a South Korean court issues verdicts on the ship's crew members charged with negligence and abandonment of passengers in the disaster.
Prosecutors have demanded a death penalty for the ship's captain and life sentences for three other crew members.
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About seven months after the sinking, 295 bodies have been retrieved but nine people are still missing. Most of the dead were teenage students on a school trip.
Oceans and Fisheries Minister Lee Ju-young told a televised news conference that the searches will stop as of today as there was only a remote chance of finding the missing bodies. "The government's conclusion is that searches by divers have reached its limit," he said.
Lee said cabins in the ferry have collapsed and winter is coming, placing divers in a 'very dangerous situation' if they continued. Lee said family members of the missing people have asked the government to stop the underwater searches.
He said the government will decide whether to raise the ship after discussing it with experts and the family members. The families have worried that raising the ship would damage the bodies or allow them to be swept away.
The ferry sinking has caused an outburst of national grief and anger, with authorities blaming the disaster on excessive cargo on the ship, poor rescue efforts, negligence by crew members and corruption by the ship's owners.