Email

Zanzibar ferry disaster: Navy searches for survivors

Footage showed the ferry upside down in the sea and survivors in the water

A naval search operation resumed at first light to find an estimated 100 people missing after a Tanzanian ferry sank near Zanzibar’s main island.

Footage showed the ferry upside down in the sea and survivors in the water

The boat had left the city of Dar es Salaam on mainland Tanzania on Wednesday with 290 people on board.

So far 34 bodies have been recovered and more than 150 people rescued.

Zanzibar’s police spokesman told the AFP news agency he feared there was now little hope of finding survivors from the MV Skagit ferry.

“Search operations continue but it is now almost impossible survivors will be found,” the agency quotes him as saying.
Three days of mourning

Survivors said they fear some of the passengers became trapped in vessel when it capsized in strong winds.

Some complained that they had initially been told everything would be OK and were not shown how to put on life jackets.

Then as the ferry went down, they jumped overboard clinging to life boats that automatically inflated, before being rescued by a passing tug boat.

Ali Mohamed Shein, president of the semi-autonomous archipelago of Zanzibar, has declared three days of national mourning.

The ferry left Dar es Salaam at 12:00 local time (09:00 GMT) on Wednesday bound for the main island of the Zanzibar archipelago.

Hamza Kabelwa, director of the Tanzania Meteorological Agency, told the BBC’s Swahili service that a warning had been issued for vessels not to make the crossing because of the rough seas.

Zanzibar’s transport minister told reporters that two Europeans were among the dead.

The rescue operation had to be abandoned on Wednesday evening because of bad weather.

The BBC’s Hassan Mhelela in Dar es Salaam says on Thursday morning there were many anxious relatives of missing MV Skagit passengers at the airport waiting to fly to Zanzibar.

The route between Dar es Salaam and Zanzibar is a busy crossing, popular with both Tanzanians and foreign tourists.

Last September, nearly 200 people died when an overcrowded boat with 800 people aboard sank off Zanzibar.

Related posts

Biden and Trump agree to 2 presidential debates, in June and in September

Columbia University protests look increasingly like those in 1968 as police storm campuses nationwide

Nearly 2,200 people have been arrested during pro-Palestinian protests on US college campuses