Cape Argus

‘My husband is swimming home’

Wife taking incident hard, but still hopeful fisherman is alive

- Yolisa Tswanya STAFF REPORTER yolisa.tswanya@inl.co.za

THE WIFE of one of the victims of the fishing trawler disaster on Sunday night still believes her husband is swimming back home. Peter Maroon, 60, died at sea along with 11 others, but the news of his death had not sunk in yet by yesterday.

Maroon was on the Lincoln, a fishing boat that was swamped by massive waves near Hangklip, forcing the crew to abandon ship on Sunday.

The crew of 21 decided to abandon the boat when they thought it would sink.

Charmaine Krieger, the sister of Maroon’s wife Pearl, said they were traumatise­d by her brother-in-law’s drowning but her sister was taking it the hardest, especially after losing their mother a month ago.

“In her mind her husband is still swimming back home.

“He was the chef on the boat and when he came back home the last time he said there was a water leak in the kitchen and that when he was working he was standing in water.”

Krieger said she heard from a crew member of another boat that was about 40 nautical miles from where the Lincoln experience­d trouble that they had

heard the distress call but were unable to help.

Their captain had reportedly said they had a faulty engine.

“Forty nautical miles, he could have gone back.

“It was etiquette, he heard the distress call and the crew told him to go back and he left them.

“When he came back to Cape Town he was ready to move again.

“How could he do that after he said he had engine trouble?

“They say it like it happens every day, that is people’s lives you are playing with.”

Lincoln crew member Mogamat de Silva said they were all shocked by the deaths of their colleagues.

“I was also meant to be on that boat but I had a problem with my eye.

“I don’t feel lucky; I feel like it was God’s will that I wasn’t there.

“I feel bad because I knew most of those guys for years.”

De Silva said he saw most of the families as they arrived for counsellin­g and he said it was sad to see so many wives, girlfriend­s and mothers crying.

“Everyone was traumatise­d and it is understand­able that they don’t want to talk now, but in time they will open up,” he said.

Rory Williams, financial director at Viking Fishing, the company that owns the boat, said they assisted the families with counsellin­g and would be assisting with the cost of funerals as well.

Williams said nine bodies were retrieved by yesterday and two were lost while being retrieved.

Those bodies and the body of another man were yet to be recovered.

“The two slipped out of their life jackets when they were being put onto another vessel. One doesn’t have the words to describe this and our thoughts and prayers are with them,” Williams said.

He said the company had a similar tragedy about eight years ago where the death toll was much higher.

“The company’s main priority at present is to ensure the well-being of the crew and family.”

 ?? PICTURE: WILLEM LAW ?? SHAKEN: Friends and family of the crew console each other outside the Viking Fishing offices in the V&A Waterfront commercial docks.
PICTURE: WILLEM LAW SHAKEN: Friends and family of the crew console each other outside the Viking Fishing offices in the V&A Waterfront commercial docks.
 ?? PICTURE: GLENN KASNER ?? STRICKEN: An undated photograph of the fishing vessel Lincoln that ran into difficulti­es on Sunday.
PICTURE: GLENN KASNER STRICKEN: An undated photograph of the fishing vessel Lincoln that ran into difficulti­es on Sunday.
 ?? PICTURE: WILLEM LAW ?? WE MADE IT! Two of the survivors of the fishing accident recover on dry land.
PICTURE: WILLEM LAW WE MADE IT! Two of the survivors of the fishing accident recover on dry land.

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