Searchers discovered the 
bodies of 48 girls wearing life vests in a cabin with a capacity of 30, 
indicating many passengers ran into the same room when the ship tilted.
The ferry Sewol is on the
 sea floor and resting with its right side up, said Capt. Kim Jin-hwang,
 a South Korean navy officer commanding the rescue operation.
Searchers are now trying to reach a dormitory-style cabin where they believe as many as 50 girls may be, he said.
Did heavy cargo lead to ferry disaster?
Man behind the South Korea ferry
Divers: There are no air pockets left
Officials said conditions remained challenging inside the submerged vessel.
The visibility is very 
poor and lots of floating objects are blocking the way, the officials 
said. Some doors can't be opened because of the water pressure, and 
divers are having to break windows to gain access to certain parts of 
the ship.
Most of the bodies being 
found are wearing life vests, which probably made it harder for them to 
escape when the ship tilted because the exits would have been underwater
 below them. Divers have had to take life vests off the bodies to carry 
them out, Kim said.
Meanwhile, strong currents are pulling hoses supplying air to the divers, making it hard for them to stay underwater for long.
The divers have already 
searched all the easily accessible places, Kim said. They are expecting 
the search to become harder because of strengthening currents and 
harsher weather conditions.
Safety concerns about sister ship
A sister ship of the 
sunken ferry operated by the same company was found to have multiple 
safety concerns, investigators told CNN.
The prosecutor's office 
leading the investigation in the southern city of Mokpo said that 
authorities have been looking at the passenger ferry Ohamana, a ship 
owned by Chonghaejin Marine. That company also owns the Sewol, which 
sank off the country's southwestern coast on April 16 with 476 people on
 board.
The Mokpo Joint 
Investigation Force Headquarters examined the Ohamana because of its 
similarities to the Sewol and to get an idea of how the Sewol may have 
been operating.
Investigators inspected 
the ship and took away documents from the ship's offices Friday. They 
studied the emergency escape plans and found the following issues:
• Of the life rafts on board, 40 did not work.
• The emergency slides did not work.
• There was no equipment to tie down cars.
• The equipment for tying down containers didn't work very well.
Like the Sewol, the Ohamana had been modified to add more passengers, the prosecutor's office said.
The Ohamana usually 
operates between Incheon and Jeju three times a week. According to the 
ship tracking website MarineTraffic.com, the Ohamana arrived in the port
 of Incheon on April 16, the day the Sewol sank, and has not left since.
The South Korean Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries said that the Ohamana ceased operating right after the sinking.
Families confront officials
The revelations about 
the sister ship came Friday, the day after angry relatives of missing 
ferry passengers cursed government and police officials for failing to 
do enough to save the lives of their loved ones as hopes of finding 
survivors dimmed.
The relatives berated 
Fisheries Minister Lee Ju-young and two coast guard officials, accusing 
them of misleading the public about the operation and of wasting time.
"How can you fool us into believing you were out there trying to save our children?" one mother yelled at the officials.
Also, officials at the 
South Korean headquarters for the task force coordinating the search 
told CNN that they believe the body of a boy who reportedly made the 
first emergency call from the ship after it began to list sharply has 
been recovered. DNA tests will help officially identify the remains, 
officials said early Friday.
Investigators urge patience
On Friday, an official involved in the investigation in Mokpo asked for patience.
"I know a lot of people 
are curious as to the cause of the accident, but we don't have the 
information yet," said Heo Yong-beom, a maritime safety judge. "We will 
try our best to satisfy and answer questions."
The ferry Sewol lurched 
on its side and capsized last week. Among the passengers were 325 high 
school students on a field trip to the resort island of Jeju.
The number of confirmed dead rose to 185 on Friday, with 117 still missing, according to the South Korean coast guard.
Hopes of finding any 
survivors in the sunken ferry have all but evaporated after news that 
divers have found no air pockets on the third and fourth levels of the 
ship, where many passengers were thought to have been trapped.
Rescuers saved 174 people on the day the ferry sank, including 75 high school students, but no survivors have been found since.
Modifications investigated
Authorities do not yet 
know what caused the sinking, but a widening criminal investigation has 
ensnared the ship's captain and more than a dozen other crew members and
 led prosecutors to search the offices of the company that owns the 
ship.
Officials also searched the offices of 20 affiliated companies and the home of Yoo Byung-un, the man whose family is believed to be behind the company, looking for any evidence of wrongdoing that could have led to the ship's sinking.
Among other things, 
investigators have said they will look into whether modifications to the
 ship in 2013 could have altered the ship's balance and contributed to 
what happened.
Kim Yong-rok, an 
opposition lawmaker who represents Jindo, an island near where the ship 
sank, told CNN that modifications to add 117 more passenger cabins to 
the ship raised the ferry's center of gravity.
Kim said the work on the
 ferry took place in 2013 after the Sewol was purchased from a Japanese 
company. The ferry's passenger capacity was expanded from 804 to 921, he
 said.
South Korean prosecutors were unable to confirm those details for CNN.
But they are 
investigating the private organization responsible for inspecting and 
certifying ships for the South Korean government, which signed off on 
the work.
Authorities said it 
didn't appear that the ferry was overloaded, according to figures 
provided by the company and the South Korean coast guard. But coast 
guard officials said investigators won't know for sure how much cargo 
the ship was carrying until it is raised from the waters of the Yellow 
Sea.
Offering sympathies
U.S. President Barack Obama offered America's sympathies to South Korea on Friday during a diplomatic visit there.
He presented South 
Korean President Park Geun-hye with a framed American flag that was 
flown over the White House the same day the ferry sank as a symbol of 
condolence.
"I'm very mindful that 
my visit comes at a time of mourning for the people of this nation," he 
told the U.S. and the South Korean delegations.
"As allies but also friends, we join you in mourning the missing, and especially the young people."
"President Park, I 
thought it would be appropriate and fitting today to honor the dead and 
missing if our delegation held a moment of silence," he said.
The two delegations then bowed their heads.
Speaking through a 
translator, Park thanked him for the gesture, and said, "The Korean 
people draw great strength from your kindness."
Source: (CNN) 








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