Five people have died and 900 have been rescued from a sinking ferry in the southern Philippines, according to coastguard officials.
63 people remain unaccounted for after the sinking of Superferry 9, but it is thought many may have been rescued by a fleet of fishing vessels and small boats that also came to the area.
The vessel was carrying about 960 passengers and crew when it set off from General Santos City, on the southern island of Mindanao, for the central city of Iloilo.
It began listing early this morning prompting authorities to sound a general alert and rush rescue vessels to the area, coastguard commander Admiral Wilfredo Tamayo told reporters.
Some 900 passengers were rescued and brought ashore on other ships.
Five people died due to exposure.
The weather was clear at the time, but the crew had reported problems with the generator.
Ferries are an important mode of transport in the Philippines, an archipelago of more than 7,000 islands.
However, their safety record is abysmal and many accidents occur because of overcrowding or poor maintenance.
Last year, more than 800 people were killed when the Princess of the Stars ferry capsized during a typhoon.
In the country's worst maritime disaster, more than 4,000 people were killed when a ferry collided with an oil tanker in 1987.
Source: https://www.rte.ie/news/2009/0906/121455-philippines/