People fought over life jackets as a blaze ripped through a crowded ferry off Indonesia, according to a survivor.
At least 23 of those on board were killed and 22 others injured in the fire that gutted most of the vessel.
Dozens were rescued from the boat which had been carrying more than 230, according to officials.
A search involving 10 ships has been launched to try to find 17 people still missing.
The ferry was taking passengers from the capital Jakarta to the resort island of Tidung, and most were Indonesians celebrating the New Year.
The manifest showed only 100 were registered as passengers, along with six crewmen.
One survivor told local media: "Fifteen minutes after the boat set sail, people at the back of the boat started making noise. Then I saw smoke.
"There was more and more, the boat was crowded and people were fighting for life jackets."
Another passenger said: "When we wanted to go, I panicked because I saw my son jump off the boat without a (life jacket) because somebody else had taken it."
Nearby fishermen managed to get many of the survivors out of the water.
The head of Jakarta's search and rescue agency, Hendra Sudirman, said 98 people had been rescued.
The fire broke out aboard the Zahro Express about 15 minutes after it left Muara Angke port in north Jakarta early on Sunday.
The cause of the blaze has not been confirmed, although one police source said it may have been a short circuit on the boat's power generator.
Sea accidents are frequent in Indonesia, with vessels often overloaded and having too few life jackets on boat.
Local television footage has shown people in the water, with ferry in flames in the background.
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