Los Angeles Times

Capsized ferry illustrate­s a common problem

Hundreds die each year in accidents like Tanzania’s — nearly 21,000 since 2000.

- By Krista Mahr Mahr is a special correspond­ent.

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — For those who monitor worldwide boat safety, the fact that one of the latest ferry catastroph­es occurred in Tanzania, killing about 225 people on Lake Victoria, did not come as a shock.

Tanzania has one of the worst ferry safety records in the world, according to the Worldwide Ferry Safety Assn. in New York. There have been several deadly accidents on Lake Victoria, Africa’s largest freshwater lake and a vital economic hub in East Africa, and off the nation’s coast in the Indian Ocean.

Ferries in Tanzania are “exceedingl­y dangerous,” said Neil Baird, a retired maritime publisher who has been tracking ferry accidents for decades. “It’s human error. Criminal incompeten­ce would be the best way of putting it.”

But safety on domestic ferries is hardly Tanzania’s problem alone. Hundreds of people die every year in ferry accidents around the world, and nearly 21,000 people have died in ferry accidents since 2000, according to the Worldwide Ferry Safety Assn.

While many of the fatalities take place on boats in the developing nations of the Philippine­s, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Tanzania, wealthier countries, like South Korea, have had deadly ferry incidents in recent years as well. In 2014, the Sewol ferry sank en route from Incheon on South Korea’s northweste­rn coast to the resort island of Jeju, resulting in more than 300 deaths — many of them students.

One of the most common causes of fatal ferry accidents is overloadin­g or overcrowdi­ng — officials in Tanzania reportedly have said a preliminar­y investigat­ion found that overloadin­g appeared to be the main reason for the tragedy last week. Bad weather, old or substandar­d vessels and poor crew training are also regular factors.

Overcrowdi­ng can influence the stability of a vessel and passengers’ ability to get out of danger, but there’s a strong financial component to the matter, said Roberta Weisbrod, executive director of the ferry safety group.

“People make more money if they overload,” Weisbrod said. “In some countries, we’ve found that the price of tickets is set artificial­ly low by the government…. In order to even cover costs, there’s this incentive to overload.”

The cost of a ferry ticket varies widely depending on the country and length of the journey.

Though the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on, the U.N. agency responsibl­e for marine shipping, regulates passenger ships that travel in internatio­nal waters, such as cruise ships, domestic ferries do not fall under its watch.

The IMO has issued safety standards for domestic ferries, which some countries have used in forming their own regulation­s, and the body has worked with individual government­s on ferry safety, including the Tanzanian government, to improve the safety of passengers traveling on Lake Victoria.

The organizati­on emphasizes the importance of avoiding overcrowdi­ng and keeping an accurate passenger manifest in those guidelines, and has also made a safety video that it distribute­s to ferry terminals around the world that warns customers about the dangers of boarding an overcrowde­d ferry.

The guidelines also urge that ships purchased secondhand be evaluated before being put into use for ferry service, and that voyages should be planned and tracked carefully as they progress, among other measures.

But many countries don’t make use of the IMO standards, Baird said, which he chalks up to “corruption and political interferen­ce.”

“IMO has no ability to interfere in the internal affairs of sovereign member states,” Baird said. “They can only work by persuasion — or ‘moral-suasion,’ let’s say.”

A spokeswoma­n for the IMO said that the organizati­on does not have any way to track whether countries are adopting the guidelines, but if a government asks for its help assessing its domestic ferry safety, the IMO can assist.

Interferry, which represents the global ferry industry, has been working to improve ferry safety in some countries, said the group’s chief executive, Mike Corrigan.

The group has participat­ed in regional safety meetings across Asia to encourage government­s to commit to better regulation enforcemen­t, make sure ships are safe and submit accident investigat­ions to the IMO.

“Our long-term aim is to educate not only operators, but also customers, on crucial safety precaution­s,” Corrigan said in an email.

The Worldwide Ferry Safety Assn., for its part, has focused on safety training for ferry crew members, starting with a pilot project in Bangladesh in 2006 that taught local crews safety skills such as managing boat stability and improving how to help people get off a vessel. The program is being used as a model for a training program by a large ferry operator in the Philippine­s, according to the associatio­n.

The associatio­n also sponsors a yearly design competitio­n for students around the world to come up with safe and inexpensiv­e ferry models. Students have designed ferries tailored to local conditions in places such as Thailand, the Singapore Strait and Bangladesh, and the associatio­n is considerin­g focusing on Lake Victoria for one of its competitio­ns.

In the latest tragedy in Tanzania, the ferry Nyerere capsized Thursday, a short distance from shore near the small island of Ukara on Lake Victoria.

The ferry, which was operated by a government agency, had an official capacity of 101 passengers, but more than double that number of people were aboard when it overturned.

Survivors said that in addition to carrying too many people, the vessel was loaded with cars and trucks, sacks of maize and baggage that toppled onto passengers as the ferry made a sharp turn shortly before capsizing.

Tanzanian President John Magufuli said it appeared the vessel was overloaded and referred to “negligence” in the ship’s handling. He ordered the arrests of several members of the ferry’s management, and on Monday he suspended the head of the agency in charge, local media reported.

 ?? Andrew Kasuku Associated Press ?? THE FERRY Nyerere capsized near an island on Lake Victoria. The vessel had a capacity of 101 passengers, but carried more than double that when it went down.
Andrew Kasuku Associated Press THE FERRY Nyerere capsized near an island on Lake Victoria. The vessel had a capacity of 101 passengers, but carried more than double that when it went down.

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