Three months later, body recovered from South Korea ferry

Flowers dedicated by family members to missing and dead passengers of sunken passenger ship Sewol float on the sea in Jindo on May 2, 2014. A culture of cosy personal ties that can blur the lines between businesses and those regulating them, of profi
Flowers dedicated by family members to missing and dead passengers of sunken passenger ship Sewol float on the sea in Jindo on May 2, 2014. A culture of cosy personal ties that can blur the lines between businesses and those regulating them, of profit over safety, and soft courts is in focus as South Korea demands answers over the sinking of the ferry with the loss of more than 300 lives, mainly high school students. -- FILE PHOTO: REUTERS

SEOUL (AFP) - Divers retrieved another body on Friday from the site of South Korea's ferry disaster - the first to be recovered in nearly four weeks from the submerged vessel that sank three months ago.

The body of a female was found inside a dining hall of the upturned ferry which is lying on the seabed at a depth of 40 metres (130 feet), rescue authorities said.

The 6,825-tonne Sewol ferry was carrying 476 passengers and crew - including 325 high school students - when it capsized and sank off the southern coast on April 16.

The latest body brings the number of confirmed dead to 294, with 10 victims still unaccounted for.

Although more than three months have now elapsed since the disaster, dive teams continue to carry out dangerous daily missions to scour the inside of the vessel for the missing bodies.

Victims' families insist that heavy cranes can only be brought in to lift the ship once all the victims have been accounted for.

President Park Geun Hye and her administration have been bitterly criticised for their response to the disaster, which stunned the entire country.

A recent report by the state auditor said the sinking was a "man-made disaster" created by negligence, corruption and greed.

Fifteen Sewol crew members are on trial, including the captain and three senior officers who are accused of "homicide through wilful negligence" - a charge that can carry the death penalty.

The bulk of the charges arise from the fact that they chose to abandon the ferry while hundreds of people were still trapped inside.

More than 30 student survivors marched on parliament this week to press demands by victims' relatives for parliament to pass a special bill setting up an independent inquiry.

The bill has been stuck in the National Assembly because of disputes between ruling and opposition lawmakers over the legal powers any inquiry panel should be given.

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