Taiwan plane crash death toll rises to 35; vice president visits funeral home to pay respects

Relatives from mainland China react as they watch divers recover bodies at the site of a commercial plane crash in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Feb. 6, 2015. TransAsia Airways Flight 235 clipped a bridge shortly after takeoff and crashed into a river in the island's capital of Taipei on Wednesday morning. (AP Photo/Wally Santana) (The Associated Press)

Search and rescue divers continue to search for missing persons at the site of a commercial plane crash in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Feb. 6, 2015. TransAsia Airways Flight 235, with 58 people aboard, clipped a bridge shortly after takeoff and crashed into a river in the island's capital of Taipei on Wednesday morning. (AP Photo/Wally Santana) (The Associated Press)

Search and rescue divers carry a recovered body at the site of a commercial plane crash in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Feb. 6, 2015. TransAsia Airways Flight 235 with 58 people aboard clipped a bridge shortly after takeoff and crashed into a river in the island's capital of Taipei on Wednesday morning. (AP Photo/Wally Santana) (The Associated Press)

Divers have pulled four more bodies from a shallow river where a TransAsia Airways propjet crashed shortly after takeoff from Taiwan's capital. That raises the confirmed death toll to 35.

A group of relatives gathered on the riverbank wailed in anguish Friday as the bodies were brought out. Helicopters helped to scan the river for eight people still missing. Fifteen survived the crash with injuries.

Taiwan's Vice President Wu Den-yih went to a Taipei funeral parlor for a prayer sessions to pay respects to the victims, many of whom were from mainland China.

Wu expressed condolences and praised the pilot Liao Chien-chung, who died in the crash Wednesday morning.

The pilots are believed to have deliberately steered the plane away from buildings in the final moments after reporting engine trouble.