Khaleej Times

Boat tragedy: Captain discourage­d passengers from wearing lifejacket

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chicago — Nine members of one family were among 17 people killed when an amphibious US tourist boat capsized during a sudden storm on a Missouri lake, a tragedy which raised renewed questions on Saturday about the safety of the craft known as “duck” boats.

The hybrid vessels, with wheels allowing them to drive on city roads but which can also travel on water, are popular with tourists in many cities. The accident occurred on Thursday night in full view of witnesses, at least one of whom captured video of the vessel bobbing in rough waters on Table Rock Lake near the city of Branson, a vacation destinatio­n popular for its theaters and country music. “My heart is very heavy. Out of 11 of us there’s only two that’s surviving, that’s me and my nephew” Tia Coleman, her voice breaking, told Fox59 from her hospital bed.

“I lost all of my children. I lost my husband. I lost my mother-inlaw and my father-in-law,” along with other relatives, she told the Indianapol­is TV station.

Coleman said the boat’s captain had told passengers earlier in their trip that they “won’t need” life jackets. “He said it when we were in the water,” she told Fox59. “When it was time to grab them, it was too late and I believe that a lot of people could have been spared.”

She added that the water “didn’t look ominous at the very first.” Coleman told CNN affiliate KOLR of her own near-death by drowning: “I was yelling, I was screaming, and finally I said, ‘Lord, just let

me die, let me die.’ She eventually floated to the surface.

Early Saturday, the Stone County Sheriff’s Office confirmed to AFP the identity of the 17 victims — nine of whom had the name Coleman. They ranged in age from one-yearold Arya Coleman to the oldest victim Ervin Coleman, 76. Five of the

dead were aged 15 or younger.

Among the unanswered questions were whether the boat crew was aware of weather warnings, and whether passengers were wearing life vests. “From what I understand, there was life jackets in the duck (boat),” Stone County Sheriff Doug Rader said. — AFP

 ?? AP ?? Brandon Webb and Carlye Michel participat­e in a candleligh­t vigil in the parking lot of Ride the Ducks in Branson. —
AP Brandon Webb and Carlye Michel participat­e in a candleligh­t vigil in the parking lot of Ride the Ducks in Branson. —

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