A ferry carrying up to 150 people capsized Thursday night in the
Persian Gulf off the coast of Bahrain, and at least 48 bodies were
recovered, the country's coast guard chief said. American divers
and a US helicopter aided the rescue effort.
Coast guard chief Youssef al-Katem said at least 63 people
survived. A passenger on board the ferry calling from his cell
phone was the first to alert officials that the ship was listing,
he said.
The official Bahrain News Agency said the ferry al-Dana
was on an evening cruise that was to last several hours. It
overturned less than a mile off the coast, it said. Television
footage showed the ferry capsized but not sunk, with rescue workers
walking on its brown hull.
US helicopters and divers joined the rescue operation launched
by Bahrain's coast guard. Bahrain, a tiny island nation on the
western side of the Persian Gulf, is home to the Navy's 5th
Fleet.
Rescue teams brought bodies covered with white sheets to shore,
and hospital workers hurried them to waiting ambulances. Scores of
officials and relatives waited on the dock watching small rescue
boats with flashing blue lights bring more bodies and
survivors.
There was no indication of what caused the ferry to capsize in
what appeared to be ideal weather conditions. The government
dismissed terrorism as a cause, and the news agency quoted Interior
Ministry spokesman Maj. Mohammed Ben Dayna calling it an
accident.
"It's too early to say what caused the accident," Ben Dayna
said.
Al-Katem said an investigation was underway. The ferry's owners
said overloading could have caused the ferry to capsize, according
to Bahrain television.
The passengers were thought to be a mix of Bahrainis, nationals
of other Gulf Arab nations and Westerners. Health Minister Nada
Haffadh told al-Arabiya television that survivors who arrived at
hospitals included nationals of India, South Africa, Singapore and
Britain.
Information Minister Mohammed Abul-Ghafar, interviewed on
al-Arabiya television, said the passengers included 25 Britons, 20
Filipinos, 10 South Africans and 10 Egyptians.
Haffadh said 24 people were hospitalized and that other
survivors had been released upon arrival on shore. Television
footage showed survivors, appearing to be in shock and their hair
still wet, squatting on the floor of a hospital. Many of them
covered themselves with blankets. One male survivor was shown being
treated for cuts to the head.
Interior Minister Sheik Al Kahlifa said most of the ferry's
passengers were employees of a Bahrain-based company.
Al-Katem said there were 150 guests at a dinner party aboard the
ferry. The guests, he said, ate dinner while the ferry was still
docked and that up to 20 of them disembarked before it sailed.
Cmdr. Jeff Breslau, a spokesman for the US Navy, said the US
military aided the rescue effort. The Navy has had a presence in
Bahrain for more than 50 years.
"We're sending divers, small boats and a helicopter," Breslau
said.
A pair of helicopters could be seen from the shore flying low
over the site of the incident. Rescue teams on small boats could
also be seen using flashlights to help them search for
survivors.
The capsizing of the ship came about two months after an
Egyptian ferry sank in the Red Sea, killing about 1,000 people. The
vessel was en route from the Saudi port of Dubah to the Egyptian
port of Safaga when it went down before dawn about 60 miles off the
Egyptian coast.
Bahrain is an oil-exporting and refining archipelago of 688,000
off the coast of Saudi Arabia.
(Chinadaily.com.cn via agencies, March 31, 2006)