Fiji Sun

Ferry captain ingnored turn back pleas: Report

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South Tarawa: The captain of the Kiribati ferry that sank last month may have ignored pleas from passengers to turn back.

The MV Butiraoi vanished after leaving Nonouti on January 18, and seven survivors were found drifting in a dinghy a week later.

Those survivors arrived on the main island, Tarawa, at the weekend, where they were taken to hospital for physical and psychiatri­c care.

Radio Kiribati editor Rikimati Naare spoke to some of the survivors and said passengers told him they heard the ferry breaking up while Nonouti was still in sight and pleaded to return. “Just before the boat broke up they heard a loud noise or crack and they tried to inform the captain to return to land.

But they said that the captain just didn’t want to hear them.

“Instead of going back to the island, he started to speed up the boat and that’s when the third noise or crack happened and it just broke in half from the middle.”

The nearly 100 passengers tried to cram into one liferaft and two dinghies, but one of the dinghies capsized and the liferaft drifted elsewhere, Mr Naare said. The passengers survived off a single bag of coconuts and when that ran out, they tried to desalinate sea water in a plastic container. “They managed to get aboard one of the sacks of coconut. They managed to survive by eating the coconut and sharing the coconut juice, especially to the kids, with that one bag of coconut,” he said.

“But then when they ran out of that bag of coconut they put the sea water into one of the containers and they tried to boil the sea water with the heat of the sun.”

At least 80 other people were on the overloaded ferry, many of them children. The wreckage is yet to be found and the missing passengers are all presumed drowned, Mr Naare said.

Kiribati school grieves loss of students

The Church of the Latter Day Saints has confirmed three of the missing ferry passengers attended the church-run Moroni High School in Tarawa. A spokespers­on said the school was grieving the loss of two currently enrolled pupils and one graduate student.

The spokespers­on said the church and school were reaching out to families in their community offering support and assistance as they come to grips with the tragedy.

The school is likely to arrange a community gathering in the next few days to commemorat­e the loss of its students in the ferry disaster.

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