ZAMBOANGA, Philippines (AFP) - – A woman who survived more than 24 hours in shark-infested waters off the southern Philippines after a ferry sank was hauled to safety Monday in what officials hailed a "miracle" rescue.
A specialist airforce rescue team found Lita Casunglon bobbing in the ocean off the Zamboanga peninsula, about 15 kilometres (nine miles) from where the Superferry 9 sank on Sunday morning in a tragedy that left nine people dead.
"She's very lucky she survived," regional navy commander Rear Admiral Alexander Pama told AFP, noting that the tropical waters of Zamboanga were notorious for being infested with sharks.
"While its not uncommon to hear of stories like this, I would definitely consider it a miracle, if I were her."
Pama said the airforce rescuers had jumped into the water to save Casunglon, and she was in a stable condition.
However he said he was still to receive the full circumstances surrounding her ordeal, such as whether she was wearing a flotation vest or had clung to anything.
The Superferry 9 officially had 968 people aboard, and an immediate rescue effort on Sunday after it began sinking saw most of the people safely ashore.
It was not all good news on Monday, with at least one person from the ferry still believed to be missing, officials said.
Coast guard chief Admiral Wilfredo Tamayo said vessels continued to scour the waters for any other survivors.
Two people had been listed on Monday morning as remaining missing and Tamayo said it was not yet clear whether Casunglon was one of those.
The number of missing dropped from 63, given by the coast guard on Sunday night to two, after authorities were able to gain a clearer picture of who was on board.
But Tamayo said he could not discount the possibility that there could have been more people aboard the vessel than officially registered on the manifest, meaning other passengers could still be missing.
While illegal, it is common practice among Philippine shipping companies to allow people aboard without listing them on the manifest.
Another concern Monday was that the ferry, now believed lying on the sea bed 18 kilometres off the coast at a depth of more than five kilometres, may spill thousands of litres of bunker fuel, the coast guard said.
And with no explanation yet over why the ferry tilted and sank, the highest authorities in the Philippines were demanding answers.
"Somebody must definitely be punished, whoever may be held liable for this mishap," presidential spokeswoman Lorelei Fajardo told reporters after an official inquiry was launched.
"We have to ensure that this will not happen again."
Questions have been raised over the sea-worthiness of the 23-year-old Japanese-built vessel, as it went down despite relatively calm weather.
Ferry travel is an extremely cheap and popular form of transport in the Philippines, an archipelago of over 7,100 islands, but it is also notoriously dangerous.
Old ships, overloading and badly trained crew members are often cited as causes of deadly sea accidents here.
In a separate rescue operation on Monday, the coast guard hauled to safety four South Korean sailors and 15 Filipinos from a life raft after their cargo vessel, the MV Hera, also sank.
The Panamanian-registered Hera began taking water late Sunday off Eastern Samar in the central Visayas region, about 400 kilometres (250 miles) from the ferry disaster, while it was making its way to China.
The crew members had been drifting for several hours in their life raft before they were rescued, Tamayo said.
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