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Vietnam searches for four missing tourists after a sudden storm capsizes a tourist boat

Authorities said that dozens of rescuers in Vietnam were searching for four missing persons on Sunday after recovering the bodies of those killed by a storm which capsized a boat at Halong Bay.

Rescuers from border guards and police to divers and navy personnel were struggling with limited visibility despite a calm sea hours before Typhoon Wipha was expected to land in the northern Vietnam. The typhoon is now heading towards Hong Kong.

Officials fear that the death toll may still increase. The government reported on Saturday that rescuers were able to recover the sunken vessel and revised the initial death toll down to 35, from 38.

Vietnam News Agency reported that all the passengers were Vietnamese, and included several children.

"My brother is a good swimmer, but everything happened so fast," Tran Trung Tu told a funeral parlor on Sunday. His sibling, Tran Trung Tu was 32.

The accident is one of the most serious in recent memory in the UNESCO protected archipelago, a group of thousands limestone islands located about 200 km (125 mi) northeast of Hanoi. This area attracts tens and thousands of tourists each year.

In a matter minutes, the sudden thunderstorm covered the sky in darkness, causing trees to fall in Hanoi. Officials at the Noi Bai International Airport said that nine flights had been diverted, and three departures were temporarily halted.

Do Thi Thuy, an insurance agent, said: "This is the first accident I've ever seen with this many victims."

In 2011, a tour boat that was carrying foreign tourists sank on Halong Bay, killing 12 people.

The government claimed that the accident was due to a "sudden storm". Around the time of the accident, which occurred at 2 pm on Saturday, there were reports of strong winds, heavy rainfall and lightning.

Do Van Hai (42), a resident of Halong, said, "I was informed that life vests were readily available, but the announcement was too abrupt." "Hopefully the missing ones will soon be found." Reporting by Thinh Nguyen and Phuong Nguyen, Halong; writing by Francesco Guarascio and editing by Edmund Klamann and Clarence Fernandez

(source: Reuters)