Titanic 2006: 100 passengers in 5 life Boats

dirty

EOG Master
Ferry with 1,272 passengers sinks
Fri Feb 3, 2006 10:17 AM ET

By Jonathan Wright
CAIRO (Reuters) - A ferry carrying 1,272 passengers sank in the Red Sea overnight on a trip from Saudi Arabia to Egypt, and search and rescue teams retrieved dozens of dead bodies from the water, official sources said on Friday.
Egyptian state television quoted naval sources as saying rescue teams had also picked up 100 survivors but other official sources gave numbers between 14 and 20 for those found alive.
At least 12 survivors were brought ashore at the Egyptian port of Sa***a, where the 35-year-old ferry was meant to arrive at 2 a.m. (7 p.m. EST) on Friday morning, Egyptian security sources said.
A search and rescue plane spotted a lifeboat near where the 11,800 gross ton Al Salam 98 last had contact with shore at about 10 p.m. (3 p.m. EST) on Thursday, one official said.
"Dozens of bodies were picked up from the sea ... they were from the ferry," a police source at Sa***a said.
An official at el-Salam Maritime Transport Company, owner of the ferry, said it might take hours to find out what had happened to the ship, which was built in Italy in 1970 and moved to the Egyptian company in 1998.
None of the officials said there was any indication that the sinking was the result of an attack on the ferry.
Most of the passengers were Egyptians working in Saudi Arabia, officials said, but at this time of year many Egyptians are still on their way home from the annual pilgrimage to Mecca.
Egypt's state news agency MENA said the passengers were 1,158 Egyptians, 99 Saudis, six Syrians, four Palestinians, a Canadian, a Yemeni, an Omani, a Sudanese and one person from the United Arab Emirates. The ship had a crew of close to 100. The London-based Lloyds Casualty Service, citing the Egyptian defense ministry, said the ship was believed to have sunk at latitude 27.08 degrees North and longitude 34.57 degrees East, about half way through its voyage.


The ferry was on a trip between the Saudi port of Duba and Sa***a, both at the northern end of the Red Sea. It had originally come from Jeddah, main port for the haj pilgrimage.
MENA said the Saint Catherine, another ferry traveling the same route overnight in the opposite direction, received a distress message in which the Al Salam captain said his ship was in danger of sinking. The agency did not say how the Saint Catherine reacted.
Coastal stations received no SOS message from the crew, said Adel Shukri, head of administration at the Cairo headquarters of el-Salam Maritime Navigation.
The weather had been very poor overnight on the Saudi side of the Red Sea, with heavy winds and rain, he said. But visibility should have been good out at sea, he added.
Another company official, Andrea Odone, said he could not confirm that the ship had sunk or that there were any survivors. "It could take some hours to work out what happened," Odone told Reuters from the company headquarters.
Transport Minister Mohamed Lutfi Mansour told MENA the armed forces had deployed four rescue vessels at the scene.
Britain said it had diverted a warship, the HMS Bulwark, from a Red Sea patrol with 650 men on board including a company of Royal Marines, to aid in a rescue.
The ship, one of Britain's two new Albion-class amphibious assault ships, was 490 miles away, and would arrive at the scene within 48 hours, a spokesman said.
A sister ship of the sunken ferry, the Al Salam 95, sank in the Red Sea in October after a collision with a Cypriot commercial vessel. In that case almost all of the passengers were rescued.
The Al Salam 98 received a safety management certificate from an Italian organization in October 2005, covering safety drills and other on-board procedures. In December 1991, 464 people were killed when the ship Salem Express hit coral outside Sa***a, which lies 600 km (375 miles) southeast of Cairo.

? Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.
 

dirty

EOG Master
Egypt refuses Israel's Help

Egypt refuses Israel's Help

Egyptian cruise ship sinks in Red Sea
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
CAIRO, Egypt
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At least twelve bodies of passengers aboard the Egyptian cruise ship Salaam 98, which sank Friday in the Red Sea, have been retrieved, Zaka reported Friday afternoon, adding that Egypt has declined the Israel Navy's offer of search and rescue assistance.
The Salaam 98 sank 40 miles off the Egyptian port of Hurghada, head of the Egyptian Maritime Authority, Mahfouz Taha Marzouk, said Friday.
Four Egyptian frigates have sailed to rescue survivors, Egypt's minister of transport, Mohammed Lutfy Mansour, told CNN shortly before the sinking of the ship was announced.
"The Coast Guard is doing every in its power to try to rescue these people," Mansour said.
Asked about the safety of the ship, Mansour said: "It met safety requirements. The number of passengers on board is less than the maximum number of people."
However, Sky News reported that the number of passengers, 1415, exceeded by some 20% the maximum number allowed on board.
Britain's top naval officer said that he had diverted a warship to the north Red Sea site where the ship had sunk.
"The HMS Bulwark was heading toward the site and will arrive in a day-and-a-half," said Adm. Sir Alan West, Britain's first sea lord, on Friday afternoon.
The ship disappeared from radar screens shortly after sailing from the western Saudi port of Dubah at seven p.m. local time on Thursday night, the maritime officials in Suez said, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the press. The ship was due to have arrived at Egypt's port of Sa***a at 3 a.m. local time.
Dubah and Sa***a lie virtually opposite each other, about 120 miles apart, at the northern end of the Red Sea.
The ship is owned by the Egyptian firm El-Salaam Maritime Transport Co. and was carrying 1,300 passengers, the official added. Some of the passengers are believed to be pilgrims returning from the annual hajj to Mecca, which ended last month.
The company's owner, Mamdouh Ismail, said the ship is more than 25 years old and registered in Panama. He spoke before the sinking was announced and refused to comment further. A ship owned by the same company, also carrying pilgrims, collided with a cargo ship at the southern entrance to the Suez Canal in October, causing a stampede among passengers trying to escape the sinking ship. Two people were killed and 40 injured
 

Hache Man

"Seven Days Without Gambling Makes One Weak"
They also turned down a U.S. offer of sending a naval patrol aircraft that could of possibly saved those who died.

The jealousy and stubbornness of some countries are just baffling.

Their people along with the families of the dead should riot in protest.......
 

The General

Another Day, Another Dollar
That is very sad and heart breaking stuff there. Seems like nobody has a clue what happened. No communication or SOS at all??
 

Santo

EOG Veteran
Hache Man said:
They also turned down a U.S. offer of sending a naval patrol aircraft that could of possibly saved those who died.

The jealousy and stubbornness of some countries are just baffling.

Their people along with the families of the dead should riot in protest.......

The geography involved means that by the time either the US Navy plane or the UK Ship arrived, there would have already been substantial presence from those in the region. Neither the UK or US offers of help would have been in advance of the existing rescue operation, as neither were based anywhere near the incident.

No life was placed at risk by declining the help, they were both originally accepted and only declined once the operation was under way and under control.
 

dirty

EOG Master
Red Sea ferry survivors say captain fled ship

Red Sea ferry survivors say captain fled ship

Red Sea ferry survivors say captain fled ship

Captain 'was the first to leave,' one says; hope fades for 800 people missing



[URL="http://www.reuters.com/"][/URL] Updated: 10:01 a.m. ET Feb. 4, 2006

SA***A, Egypt - Survivors of the Red Sea ferry disaster said on Saturday the Egyptian captain had fled his burning ship by lifeboat and abandoned them to their fate, as hopes faded of finding some 800 missing people.
Some passengers, plucked alive from the sea or from boats after the ferry caught fire and sank early on Friday, said crew members had told them not to worry about the blaze below deck and even ordered them to take off lifejackets.
An official at el-Salam Maritime Transport Company, which owned the Al Salam 98, said the captain, named as Sayyed Omar, was still unaccounted for. The company will issue a written statement on the disaster later on Saturday, he added.
Rescue workers have recovered 195 bodies from the Red Sea and saved 400 people, but about 800 more, most of them Egyptian workers returning from Saudi Arabia, are missing.
The director of the Red Sea Ports Authority, Maj. Gen. Mahfouz Taha, said 378 survivors had come ashore on the Egyptian side. The Saudi authorities said they had picked up 22.
'The captain was the first to leave'
Survivors said a fire broke out below deck shortly after the 35-year-old vessel left the Saudi port of Duba on Thursday evening with 1,272 passengers and a crew of about 100.
The ship began to list but the crew continued to sail out into the Red Sea rather than turn back to the Saudi port, they told reporters in the Egyptian port of Sa***a, where the ferry should have landed early on Friday.

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Egyptian survivor Shahata Ali said the passengers had told the captain about the fire but he told them not to worry.
?We were wearing lifejackets but they told us there was nothing wrong, told us to take them off and they took away the lifejackets. Then the boat started to sink and the captain took a boat and left,? he added, speaking to Reuters Television.
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?The captain was the first to leave and we were surprised to see the boat sinking,? added Khaled Hassan, another survivor. Other survivors also reported that the crew had played down the gravity of the situation and withheld lifejackets.
?There was a fire but the crew stopped the people from putting on lifejackets so that it wouldn?t cause a panic,? said Abdel Raouf Abdel Nabi, one of the survivors.
?There was a blaze down below. The crew said ?Don?t worry, we will put it out.? When things got really bad the crew just went off in the lifeboats and left us on board,? said Nader Galal Abdel Shafi, another arrival on the same rescue boat.
Fire broke out on vehicle
Shirin Hassan, the head of the maritime section of the Egyptian Ministry of Transport, told state television the fire seemed to have broken out on a vehicle on the lower car deck.
The crew thought they had put it out but it flared up again, he said, citing a preliminary analysis.
It was not immediately clear why coastguards did not appear to have received any distress signal from the ferry.
State news agency MENA said on Friday morning a ship did pick up a message from the ferry?s captain saying he was in danger of sinking. It did not say how the ship reacted.
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who has ordered an immediate investigation into the disaster, visited some of the injured in a hospital in the port of Hurghada on Saturday.
Mubarak ordered the government to pay 30,000 Egyptian pounds ($5,200) in compensation to each of the families of the dead and 15,000 pounds to each of the survivors, MENA said.
In Sa***a, riot police fired four tear gas canisters at angry relatives of the passengers after some in the crowd had thrown stones at the police holding them back at the gate to the port, witnesses said.
In the morning an official came and read out a partial list of the names of survivors to the assembled relatives.
Fathi Kamel cried out: ?Allahu Akbar (God is Most Great)? when he heard that his nephew was among the survivors.
Others broke down in tears when the reading ended and they had not heard the names they were waiting for.
Enough lifeboats?
Egyptian presidential spokesman Suleiman Awad said on Friday there may not have been enough lifeboats.
?The speed with which the ship sank and the lack of sufficient lifeboats indicate there was some deficiency,? he told Egyptian television.
A shipping company official said the Saudi authorities had confirmed that everything was in order when the ship sailed.
MENA said the passenger list included more than 1,000 Egyptians, as well as other nationalities, including Saudis, Syrians, and a Canadian.
A sister ship of the sunken ferry, the Al Salam 95, sank in the Red Sea in October after a collision with a Cypriot commercial vessel. All but four of the passengers were saved.
Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
 

winkyduck

TYVM Morgan William!!!
that captain is in DEEP DOG "droppings" once he is found. he will wish he had gone down with the ship - for his life - as long as it may be - will be a miserable one once they find him
 
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