DUBAI // Distraught Filipino expatriates were anxiously awaiting news yesterday as divers searched for survivors of the St Thomas Aquinas ferry disaster.
The inter-island ferry loaded with 870 passengers and crew sank near the port of Cebu on Friday night after colliding with the container ship Sulpicio Express 7 with 36 crew.
At least 38 people died and 82 are missing. A Philippine navy spokesman said there was a slim chance that divers could find survivors in air pockets in the ferry.
Gina Busa, 52, a travel agent in Dubai, has hardly slept since she learnt that her aunt and uncle, Eugenia and Emmanuel Balacuit, from Butuan City, were on board. Mrs Balacuit’s body was recovered on Saturday. Mr Balacuit, a businessman, is missing.
“Although we’re not related by blood as they’re my husband’s relatives, I feel so sad and depressed,” said Ms Busa.
“I spent eight years in Butuan City before I left for Dubai in 1989,” Ms Busa said.
Updates about the recovery of her aunt’s body, the search for her missing uncle, and words of comfort for the family trickled in on her Facebook feed.
Ms Busa’s two children are especially close to their great aunt and uncle. “They’re really devastated by her death,” she said.
Ms Busa described the couple, in their sixties, as “affectionate, generous and active”.
A relative, Jeanette Ronquillo Balacuit, has kept the entire clan updated on Facebook about the funeral arrangements while relatives in Cebu posted their updates on the search.
“The clan had a grand reunion last May but I was unable to come home,” Ms Busa said. “The last time I saw them was in 2005.
“All of us, the entire clan, are trying to cope with this great loss. We are waiting and hoping to hear some piece of good news about our uncle.”
rruiz@thenational.ae