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1450 Passenger
Ship Sinks in Red Sea
Lifeboats, bodies reported near
where ship last seen
Friday, February 3, 2006; 6.30 am
Source: CNN, AP, eTN Egypt An
Egyptian passenger ship said to be
carrying more than 1,400 people has
disappeared in the Red Sea off the
Saudi coast.
The ship, the Al Salam Boccaccio 98,
left Dubah, western Saudi Arabia, en
route to Egypt's southern port of
Safaga, a spokesman for the El Islam
Maritime Transport Co. told CNN.
Lifeboats, bodies reported near
where ship last seen.
The ship left Dubah, western Saudi
Arabia, en route to Egypt's southern
port of Safaga
State-run Nile Television, quoting
the Red Sea governor, said the ship
was carrying 1,415 people -- 1,310
of them Egyptians.
"Our understanding now is that there
are survivors," said Egyptian
Minister of Transport Mohamed Loutfy
Mansour, who said the reports came
from helicopter pilots.
"The Coast Guard is doing everything
in its power to try to rescue the
people." Four frigates were expected
to arrive at the site soon, he
added. (Map of the area)
The Egyptian government has called
their Saudi counterparts in the port
of Jedda to seek help, he said.
The ship disappeared at midnight (5
p.m. Thursday ET) from radar
screens.
The Egyptian government had
initiated a search for the
25-year-old liner, which can carry
1,487 passengers, he added.
Helicopters have spotted bodies
floating on the sea and one lifeboat
carrying three people in the
vicinity of where the ship was last
seen on the radar screens, maritime
officials told The Associated Press.
The ship was due to have arrived at
Safaga at 3 a.m. local time, but did
not, the officials added.
CNN's Ben Wedeman said most of those
on board would be working-class
Egyptians returning to Egypt after
taking part in the hajj pilgrimage
to Mecca.
He said that the weather was not too
bad -- though fairly windy with
temperatures cooler than the average
for the rest of the year. Wederman
said that area of the Red Sea sees a
lot of shipping traffic as it is
near the Suez Canal.
David Osler, of Lloyd's List, told
CNN while it was too early to
speculate on the cause of the ship's
disappearance, the vessel was a
roll-on roll-off ferry of design
known to suffer stability problems.
"Once a small amount of water gets
on board it can set up an
uncontrollable rocking that causes
rapid capsize," he said.
He said safety standards in the
developed world had improved
markedly in the after the Pride of
Free Enterprise sank at Zeebruge,
Belgium, in 1987, killing 193
passengers.
The ship, which was built in 1970,
was involved in a collision in 1999,
he said.
"This vessel was pensioned off from
Italy. It may have been overloaded,"
he said.
The ship is owned by the Egyptian
firm El-Salaam Maritime Transport
Co. Some of the passengers are
believed to be pilgrims returning
from the annual hajj to Mecca, which
ended last month. |