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Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Ferry with 1,300 People Aboard Sinks in Red Sea

An Egyptian passenger ferry carrying around 1,300 people, mostly Egyptian workers returning from Saudi Arabia, sank in the Red Sea overnight.

 

Coast Guard vessels pulled dozens of bodies from the water on Friday and rescued 100 survivors from lifeboats, officials said.

 

The 35-year-old ship, "Al-Salam Boccaccio 98," went down 70 kilometres off the Egyptian port of Hurghada between midnight and 2 am as most of the passengers were sleeping, plunging them into waters whose temperatures average around 19 C in February.

 

The cause was not immediately known, but there were high winds and a sandstorm overnight on Saudi Arabia's west coast, from which the ship departed on Thursday evening.

 

"It's a roll-on, roll-off ferry and there is big question mark over the stability of this kind of ship," said David Osler of the London shipping paper Lloyds List. "It would only take a bit of water to get on board this ship and it would be all over.

 

"The percentage of this type of ferry involved in this type of disaster is huge."

 

The agent for the ship in Saudi Arabia, Farid al-Douadi, said there were around 220 vehicles on board and that the ship had the capacity for 2,500 passengers.

 

Four Egyptian rescue ships reached the scene on Friday afternoon, around 10 hours after the ship likely went down.

 

An official at the Maritime Authority control room in Suez confirmed that 20 bodies had been pulled out of the water so far. He said about 100 survivors were rescued from five lifeboats. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

 

A spokesman for the Egyptian Embassy in London, Ayman al-Kaffas, told the BBC that "dozens of bodies" had been pulled out of the water and several life boats had been spotted.

 

The ship left at 7 pm local time on Thursday from the Saudi port of Duba, a common transit point for tens of thousands of Egyptian expatriates working in Saudi Arabia - many of them impoverished - to return home.

 

The Salaam 98's 1,318 passengers included about 1,200 Egyptians, as well as 99 Saudis, three Syrians, two Sudanese, a Canadian, and a crew of 96, the control room official said.

 

Among the passengers were likely Muslim pilgrims who had overstayed their visas after last month's haj pilgrimage to work in the kingdom.

 

It was destined for Safaga, a port 200 kilometres across the Red Sea, from which workers pass on to their homes, mostly in southern Egypt.

 

No distress signal was received from the ferry, but at some point during the night it disappeared from radar screens, the control room official said.

 

Britain diverted a warship, HMS Bulwark, to the scene. Sir Alan West, first sea lord, said the ship would arrive in 36 hours.

 

In Bahrain, the US 5th Fleet said Egyptian authorities have turned down an offer by the Americans to divert a US P3-Orion maritime naval patrol aircraft to the area where the boat went down.

 

"The ship complied with all necessary safety measures," Egyptian Transport Minister Mohammed Lutfy Mansour told Egypt's semi-official Middle East News Agency. "The reasons (for sinking) remain unknown."

 

Egyptian Maritime Authority Mahfouz Taha Marzouk said the ship was built in 1971 and renovated in 1990 in an Egyptian shipyard.

 

Osler of Lloyds List said that last June the ship passed a structural survey test conducted by the International Safety Management Code.

 

While the ship's owners and the maritime authority referred to the ship as "Salaam 98," Osler said its registered name was Al-Salam Boccaccio 98.

 

Duba and Safaga lie virtually opposite each other at the northern end of the Red Sea, which is an extremely busy sea route, with east-west traffic between Saudi Arabia and Egypt as well north-south traffic through the Suez Canal and to and from the Israeli and Jordanian ports of Eilat and Aqaba.

 

The ship is owned by the Egyptian firm El-Salaam Maritime Transport Co. The company's owner, Mamdouh Ismail, said the ship is registered in Panama.

 

(China Daily via Agencies February 4, 2006)

 

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