Showing posts with label survival story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label survival story. Show all posts

Thursday, August 6, 2009

62 MISSING


A total of 62 people are missing at sea and this number may grow, said Police Commander Chris Kelley, this morning, as there is great difficulty in trying to reconcile passenger figures after the sinking of the MV Princess Ashika in Ha'apai waters late on August 5.

"We believe a more accurate manifest was on board and was lost so there could have been more persons on board who have not been identified," he said, describing the sinking as, "a terrible tragedy and major disaster in Tonga ... that strikes right at the heart of a nation of sea-faring people".

In his first press conference, the Commander stated of today, the Tonga Police and the Shipping Company believed that 117 persons were on board when the vessel left Tongatapu on Wednesday evening, August 5. The final manifest, in possession of a crew member, was lost with the vessel.

He said of the 62 people who are unaccounted were
4 male crews and 58 passengers identified as:
19 male passengers;
21 female passengers;
7 children, including babies;
11 people have not been identified as to whether they are males or females.

The Commander said that 62 people who are unaccounted for was based on the revised ship's manifest.

"Our focus is still on rescuing people. Not all the liferafts are accounted for and there was ample safety equipment on board,. . . but one liferaft can be seen snagged underwater at location of the sinking," he said.

"The Tonga Police are currently coodinating a major maritime search and rescue operation in the Ha'apai group of islands.

"Over 77% of the search pattern area had been completed by the Orion at nightfall on August 6," he said.

"But as time goes by there less and less chance of more survivors being picked up"

Survivors

There are 53 known survivors, all males;, and two confirmed dead, one European male and one Polynesian female, bringing the number accounted for to 55.

There are 58 passengers and four crew unaccounted for, including a Japanese crew member.

He said of the 25 survivors and two dead, only 12 were listed on the manifest and 15 were not.

Of the two dead, the unidentified female body was found by a fishing boat and brought to Nuku'alofa where is now kept at Vaiola Hospital morgue. The body of the European male, believed to be that of a Britishman who was living in New Zealand, is still being kept at Niu'ui Hospital morgue and will be brought down to the capital today. Commander Kelly said the next of kin had not been notified, and efforts were being made to establish identity of both the deceased.

The commander said they would not release an official list of the survivors until they had properly determined the names. "there are changing patterns of identity.

"The operation will continue until we have accounted for and identified all on board," he said.

The 24 hour telephone hotlines for families of the passengers and crew are:

Police hotlines
+676 28681
+676 27154
+676 24921

National Emergency Centre hotlines:
+676 28004
+676 28005


People who know their family members were passengers, or who put people on the MV Ashika should contact these numbers.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Sole known survivor of plane crash, 14,


MORONI, Comoros - Despite a fractured collarbone, a teenage girl clung to the wreckage of a plane for more than 13 hours before rescuers found her floating in the Indian Ocean, authorities said. The only known survivor of the crash, she was being flown back to Paris last night.

The Yemenia Airbus 310 jet was carrying 153 people when it went down in howling winds early Tuesday in the sea north of the Comoros Islands.

French officials late yesterday retracted claims that one of the plane’s black boxes had been found. French Commander Bertrand Mortemard de Boisse said that a signal detected from the debris of Yemenia Flight IY626 was from a distress beacon and not from one of the plane’s black boxes.

The flight data and cockpit voice recorders in those black boxes are crucial to help investigators determine the cause of the crash off this former French colony.

An Associated Press reporter saw 14-year-old Bahia Bakari in a Comoros hospital yesterday as she was visited by government officials. She was conscious with bruises on her face and gauze bandages on her right elbow and right foot. Her hair was pulled back and she was covered by a blue blanket but she gamely shook the hand of Alain Joyandet, France’s minister for international cooperation.

Her uncle, Joseph Yousouf, said Bahia also had a fractured collarbone.

“She is a courageous young girl,’’ Joyandet said, adding that Bahia held on to a piece of the plane from 1:30 a.m. Tuesday to 3 p.m., then signaled a passing boat, which rescued her.

“She really showed an absolutely incredible physical and moral strength,’’ he said. “She is physically out of danger, she is evidently very traumatized.’’

The girl was traveling with her mother, who is feared dead. They had left Paris on Monday night to see family in the Comoros.

“She’s asking for her mother,’’ Yousouf said. For fear of upsetting Bahia, Yousouf told her that her mother is in the room next door.

Joyandet said the girl left last night on a chartered executive jet and would be put in a Paris hospital upon arrival.

The passengers on the downed plane were flying the last leg of a journey from Paris and Marseille to Comoros, with a stop in Yemen to change planes. Most were from Comoros, 66 were French citizens.

The girl’s father told French radio his oldest daughter could “barely swim’’ but managed to hang on. Kassim Bakari, who spoke with the girl by phone, said Bahia was ejected and found herself beside the plane.

“She couldn’t feel anything, and found herself in the water. She heard people speaking around her but she couldn’t see anyone in the darkness,’’ Bakari said on France’s RTL radio. “She’s a very timid girl, I never thought she would escape like that.’’

Sergeant Said Abdilai told Europe 1 radio that Bahia was too weak to grasp the life ring rescuers threw to her, so he jumped into the sea to get her. He said rescuers gave the trembling girl warm water with sugar.

Said Mohammed, a nurse at El Mararouf hospital in the Comoros capital of Moroni, said the girl was doing well.

The crash a few miles off this island nation came two years after aviation officials reported equipment faults with the plane, an aging Airbus 310 flying the last leg of a Yemenia airlines flight from Paris and Marseille to the Comoros, with a stop in Yemen to change planes.

A top French official said the Airbus 310 crashed in deep water 9 miles north of the Comoran coast and 21 miles from the Moroni airport.

The French air accident investigation agency BEA was sending a team of safety investigators and Airbus specialists to Comoros, an archipelago of three main islands 1,800 miles south of Yemen, between Africa’s southeastern coast and the island of Madagascar.

The London-based International Federation of Air Line Pilots Association said the plane may have been attempting a go-around in rough weather for another approach when it hit the sea.