Saturday, February 04, 2006

Seaworthiness, Crew Conduct Questioned in Ferry Tragedy.



Survivor says the ferry that sent no distress signal sailed for 90 minutes after a fire was detected.
Total on board: 1416
Rescued: 314
Bodies found: 185

The Egyptian government says it is too early to say what caused the sinking of the Al Salam Boccaccio 98 Thursday night, in which as many as 1,000 passengers died. But questions are being asked about the role of the crew and the seaworthiness of the ferry that had been crossing from Saudi Arabia to Egypt’s Red Sea coast.
Survivors have spoken variously of an explosion, fire, smoke and severe listing that preceded the sinking of the ship, about an hour and a half after it left the Saudi port of Dubah. There were no reports that the ship had run into a coral reef, a cause of previous Red Sea shipping disasters. Egyptian Minister of Transport Mohammed Mansour, dismissing claims that the vessel had been overloaded and said it had complied with safety regulations.

Mansour reported that a fire may have broken out in the ship's engine room. And some eyewitnesses suggested that a fire may have ignited an explosion in the ship's lower-level vehicle parking bay. The ship's owner, Al Salam Maritime Transport Co. in Cairo, called the sinking "mysterious" and said the ship had experienced no technical problems before the accident. It said that poor weather, including 65-mile-an-hour winds and rough seas, may have played a part.

Survivors interviewed, also blamed the disaster on the poor response of the 96-person crew, which reportedly failed to issue a distress signal. Girgis Rifaat, an Egyptian salesman returning from Kuwait, suggested that because the ship had sailed on for at least 90 minutes after the first sign of trouble, it may have been able to return to Dubah without loss of life to if it had turned back.

Several reported that crew members had spoken of a fire in the engine room but gave assurances that the problem would be solved. "They didn't tell anybody anything," Egyptian government worker Mohammed Abdallah said. Saudi student Yasser Mohammad Al Rafai said that the ship lacked sufficient lifeboats, a potential factor in the great loss of life later raised by Suleiman Awad, spokesman for Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

Some experts indicated that the Al Salam Boccaccio 98 had been an accident waiting to happen. David Osler, industrial editor of Lloyd's List in London, notes there has been a string of disasters with so-called "roll-on, roll-off" ships that carry vehicles as well as passengers, such as when the British ferry Herald of Free Enterprise sank in1987 after taking on some water through the open bows.

Tightened rules of seaworthiness eventually led many European owners to sell off the ferries to developing countries where less stringent regulations applied.
"It was a double standard: They are not safe enough for us, they are safe enough to pass on to poorer countries," . "Every year this millennium we have seen the capsize of a roll-on roll-off ferry in the Third World with hundreds of deaths. It's a bloodbath."


How easy it is to misuse the "third world" or "poor countries"! .... Result, thousands of poeple die!!
May they rest in peace!!

5 comments:

Seif said...

Nice post sis ..... allah yenawar !! ;)

Shady said...

the answer to ur question is the "ONE MAN SHOW" and the one man decision.

Sarah said...

>Sif<, u r welcome! :)

>Shady<, u r right.. but the occasion of having a decision wasn't even there to make one!! that's the tragedy!

Shady said...

he was there, but he was asleep...and they didn't wanna wake him up. they waited for him to wake up so they can ask him if they should send resc. or not!

this is true by the way

Sarah said...

everything is possible!! And y bothering him, let him dream and have some rest!!... He slept forever.