Nearly 200 drown as overloaded ferry sinks
By Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala and Ally Saleh in Zanzibar
Sunday, 11 September 2011
Source - Independent, UK
Almost 200 have people are known to have drowned after an overloaded ferry capsized as it sailed from Zanzibar to Pemba Island in Tanzania's worst maritime disaster in at least 15 years.
Fishing boats, tour operators and diving instructors were scouring the sea for survivors yesterday. Zanzibar police last night said that 192 bodies had been recovered and 606 passengers rescued from the Indian Ocean so far. Two tug boats docked at Zanzibar's port, one carrying 17 bodies and another with 15 bodies, many of them children. At the northern tip of the island, dozens of soldiers carried bodies on to the white sand beaches.
"The ferry flipped and capsized. There could be more bodies trapped inside the hull," rescue worker Ali Ramadhan said. Some survivors said the boat was listing even before it had left port.
The MV Spice Islander, built to carry 600 passengers but carrying possibly as many as 800, had been sailing from Zanzibar to Pemba, part of xthe Zanzibar archipelago and a popular tourist destination.
By Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala and Ally Saleh in Zanzibar
Sunday, 11 September 2011
Source - Independent, UK
Almost 200 have people are known to have drowned after an overloaded ferry capsized as it sailed from Zanzibar to Pemba Island in Tanzania's worst maritime disaster in at least 15 years.
Fishing boats, tour operators and diving instructors were scouring the sea for survivors yesterday. Zanzibar police last night said that 192 bodies had been recovered and 606 passengers rescued from the Indian Ocean so far. Two tug boats docked at Zanzibar's port, one carrying 17 bodies and another with 15 bodies, many of them children. At the northern tip of the island, dozens of soldiers carried bodies on to the white sand beaches.
"The ferry flipped and capsized. There could be more bodies trapped inside the hull," rescue worker Ali Ramadhan said. Some survivors said the boat was listing even before it had left port.
The MV Spice Islander, built to carry 600 passengers but carrying possibly as many as 800, had been sailing from Zanzibar to Pemba, part of xthe Zanzibar archipelago and a popular tourist destination.