Rescue operations continued on Sunday inside the cruise ship that ran
aground off the shore of Tuscany, Italy late Friday, triggering a
confused evacuation of thousands of passengers in which five people
died.
The number of unaccounted people dropped significantly as Italian
authorities discovered more passengers who had made it to shore safely,
checking their names off the ship’s passenger and crew lists. Rescuers
also plucked more survivors from inside the ship, including an Italian
crew member, recovered early Sunday, and two South Korean nationals on
Saturday. Italian officials said 15 people remained missing.
The South Korean survivors, identified by rescue workers as a couple
on their honeymoon, were found closed inside one of the ship’s cabins.
Prato’s fire commander, Vincenzo Bennardo, said rescuers who had been
banging on doors of the ship cabins all night finally heard a reply from
one of the rooms early Sunday, the Associated Press reported. He said
the two, about 29 years old, were in good condition, the AP reported.
Italian prosecutors and coast guard, meanwhile, are investigating
what caused the cruise ship to run aground off the Tuscan shore,
triggering what many passengers described as a disorderly evacuation.
A spokeswoman for the Italian coast guard on Saturday said the Costa
Concordia’s captain, Francesco Schettino, had been detained for
questioning by police and coast guard officials. Schettino has said the
rock formation hit by the ship Friday night off the small island of
Giglio wasn’t marked on nautical maps, according to the coast guard
spokeswoman. Schettino, who hasn’t been charged, was being held in a
prison in the town of Grosseto and couldn’t be reached for comment.
A lawyer for the captain didn’t immediately respond to a written request for comment.
Three bodies were recovered from the sea after the ship with 4,234
people aboard struck the rock formation, tearing a 160-foot gash in the
hull that sent water gushing into the ship.
Local officials said two more bodies had been found inside the ship on Sunday, but offered no details on the victims.
Passengers who survived the ordeal recounted that the ship’s crew was
slow to evacuate the ship, sowing panic throughout the boat as it began
to twist sideways in the water, upending its decks.
Angel Morales, 53 years old, was seated at dinner with his wife when
the boat struck the rock. Glasses and plates slid off the tables as the
boat tilted. “Waiters were picking them up as if it was nothing,” he
said. “They kept saying that it was nothing, that it was an electrical
problem.”
Video taken by passengers showed a passive crew struggling to give
instructions on how to evacuate the boat as the situation deteriorated
and power outages ensued. As a result, the boat was listing too severely
by the time the crew moved to lower the lifeboats, according to the
coast guard. By the time helicopters and private boats rushed to the
scene, people were leaping off the ship decks into dark cold waters.
Italian authorities late Saturday recovered the ship’s black-box
recorder, but it is too soon to say what, if anything, it may reveal
about the accident.
Antonio Belardo, a local official, said the ship deviated from its
“usual” route in order to give passengers a view of Giglio’s port. That
meant navigating a strait, so that the ship could skirt a stretch of the
small island’s coastline that faces mainland Italy.
Gianni Onorato, managing director of Carnival Corp.’s (CCL) Costa
Cruises, which operated the ship, told reporters on Saturday that the
course taken by the ship Friday evening was “not a defined route for
passing Giglio.” However, Onorato said it would be “incorrect to say the
ship was off course,” adding that he was unaware of all of the possible
routes available to the captain at the time.
“It’s difficult to say at this moment what happened,” Onorato said,
adding that the company was cooperating with authorities to “shed light
on the causes of this tragedy that is unprecedented in our 64-year
history.”
Italian media reported that the boat hit a grouping of rocks known as Le Scole, about a half-mile off the coast of Giglio.
The Costa Concordia ship was lying basically flat off the coast of
the tiny island of Giglio, its starboard side submerged in the water and
the huge gash showing clearly on its upturned hull.
The AP reported that one of the victims was a Peruvian crew member, a
diplomat from the South American country said, adding that a Peruvian
woman was also missing. A French Foreign Ministry official confirmed
that two of the bodies were Frenchmen, both tourists, the AP reported.
Some 30 people were reported injured, most of them suffering only
bruises, but at least two people were reported to be in grave condition.
Several passengers came off the ferries on stretchers, but it appeared
more out of exhaustion and shock than serious injury.
Carnival didn’t address the passengers’ allegations in a statement it issued. “Our hearts go out to everyone affected by the grounding
of the Costa Concordia and especially the loved ones of those who lost
their lives. They will remain in our thoughts and prayers in the wake of
this tragic event.”
Sumbe:http://gcaptain.com/costa-concordia-sunday-night-update/?37668
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
COSTA CONCORDIA Sunday Night Update: Rescue Efforts Continue
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COSTA CONCORDIA Sunday Night Update: Rescue Efforts Continue
COSTA CONCORDIA Sunday Night Update: Rescue Efforts Continue
COSTA CONCORDIA Sunday Night Update: Rescue Efforts Continue
COSTA CONCORDIA Sunday Night Update: Rescue Efforts Continue
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