AP TELEVISION
1. Close-up of Im Seon-mi, mother of missing student Park Hye-seon UPSOUND (Korean) "My daughter, what can I do?"
2. SOUNDBITE (Korean) Im Seon-mi, mother of missing daughter Park Hye-seon:
"I feel like she is gone, when I should be the one who is gone"
3. Various of Im holding hand to face whilst crying
4. Close of tag around Im's neck that reads (Korean) "Second grade, Classroom 2" and "Parent"
5. Im sitting by sea UPSOUND (Korean) "So you want to see an even prettier picture of her?"
6. Picture on phone of Im's daughter as child
7. SOUNDBITE (Korean) Im Seon-mi, mother of missing daughter Park Hye-seon:
"I thought she would return alive yesterday. Resurrected. My daughter. Not just my daughter but I thought all her friends would also return alive."
8. Close of Im's face UPSOUND (Korean) "She did not express very much but she was warm hearted."
9. SOUNDBITE (Korean) Im Seon-mi, mother of missing daughter Park Hye-seon:
"The government are just pretending to work. But it's just a show. And the media just play their game. When we request that we need to get in there (the ship), they say something has to come from here and from there. But that's not true. This is a hundred percent man-made disaster. If the government acted quicker, all the children would have been saved."
10. Pan from sea to Im's face
11. SOUNDBITE (Korean) Im Seon-mi, mother of missing daughter Park Hye-seon:
"After Hye-seon's funeral I am not going to let them be. Be they government or whatever, I am going to kill them and rip their limbs off and hang them up at Gwanghwamun crossroad (landmark in Seoul)."
12. Pan from Im to water
13. Various of people inside temporary shelter at Jindo gymnasium
14. Pan from sign that reads (Korean) "counselling room" to doctors sitting at desk
15. Doctor sitting at desk
16. Pharmacist talking to woman
17. Close of woman's hands
18. Pharmacist with medicines in rack behind her
19. Pharmacist handing woman bag
20. SOUNDBITE (Korean) Kim Seog-ju, Assistant Professor at Seoul National University College of Medicine and volunteer helping relatives:
"The relatives are feeling a lot of guilt and nervousness. As I said before, the situation is still ongoing so many of them do not have time for psychological counselling. Even if we prescribe sleeping pills some of them do not wish to take them, or refuse to take them so they can monitor the situation."
21. Woman covering her face crying as she is escorted past by a man
22. Woman hugging her legs, sitting on the ground, ambulance drives past
23. Various of Buddhist monk chanting mantra and beating wood block
The mother of a missing student who was on the sunken South Korean ferry said on Monday the government had not done enough in the disaster which has left more than 300 people dead or missing.
Im Seon-mi, whose 16 year-old daughter Park Hye-seon was on board the ferry, 'Sewol', when it capsized last week, fought back tears as she showed pictures of her daughter on her mobile phone.
"I feel like she is gone, when I should be the one who is gone," she said.
Her anger was evident and she accused the government and the media of making the situation worse.
"After Hye-seon's funeral I am not going to let them be," she said. "Be they government or whatever, I am going to kill them and rip their limbs off and hang them up at Gwanghwamun crossroad (landmark in Seoul)."
Anger is widespread among missing passengers' relatives who are staying in a temporary shelter at a gymnasium on the island of Jindo.
On Sunday, about 100 relatives marched for six hours, intending to travel to South Korean president Park Geun-hye's office 400 kilometres (250 miles) away, before police stopped them.
Families also blocked the prime minister's car and cursed at and pushed the fisheries minister.
On Monday, a doctor volunteering to help those relatives said treating them was difficult as many refused to take prescribed medication in fear of missing any developments.
"Many of them do not have time for psychological counselling," said Kim Seog-ju, an assistant professor at a medical school in Seoul.
"If we prescribe sleeping pills some of them do not wish to take them, or refuse to take them so they can monitor the situation."
So far 64 bodies have been recovered, and about 240 people remain missing. About 225 of the missing and dead are students from a single high school near Seoul who were on their way to the southern island of Jeju.