Sao Paulo, Brazil — At least 10 people have been confirmed dead and dozens more are still feared missing in northern Brazil after a boat sank overnight in the Amazon basin, the local government said Wednesday.
Rescuers rushed to the wreck on the Xingu river in northern Para state, which borders a long section of the Amazon river and contains several large tributaries.
However, in an updated toll, the state security secretary said only 15 people had been rescued alive so far, not the 20 originally listed.
There was no accurate passenger manifest, authorities said, but there were believed to be about 70 people aboard when the boat went down near Ponta Negra.
There was no immediate information about the cause of the sinking, although newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo said the theory that it got caught in a storm was being considered.
“Searches are continuing above and below water. It’s a hard-to-access area and of the three aircraft we sent, one is there just to act as a communications base,” Colonel Augusto Lima, from the Para firefighters’ service, told Folha.
Those so far rescued got out by swimming, Globo news organization reported, saying that the boat went down about 1,640 feet (500 meters) from the riverbank.
Ferries, fishing vessels and large commercial ships ply the Amazon waterways as one of the main forms of transport in a region with relatively few roads. The vessel in the fatal incident had left the port of Santarem bound for Vitoria de Xingu.
On August 2, nine people were listed missing in Para state when a group of rafts and a container ship collided on the Amazon river.