The New Zealand Herald

Victim’s family look for answers to boat tragedy

Hours before he died, Tevita Kava spoke of his fears of falling overboard

- Martin Johnston

The family of Tevita Kava, who fell from a party boat into the Waitemata Harbour and died, are hoping for answers in a court trial that starts today.

The cruise company from whose boat Kava, 29, fell overboard during his friend’s 30th birthday celebratio­n on June 3, 2017, is being prosecuted in the Auckland District Court under workplace health and safety law.

A cousin of Kava’s, Wellington­ian Ngaire Speedy, said family members were expecting to attend the trial, although she couldn’t because she was unable to get leave from her restaurant job.

She said some family members were coping better than others with the loss of Kava.

“We are slowly getting there. With my mum — she was quite close to him, he was like another son to her — she still finds it hard. When she finds old photos of when we were kids she still gets upset.”

Speedy said the family were looking forward to the court case. They had unanswered questions and hoped they would be answered.

“I think that’s what my mum is finding hard the most. She knows he’s gone, she just doesn’t know why or how. Just why it took so long for the workers to react when the people that were on the boat said that he fell off.”

Speedy’s view was that if there had been a more rapid reaction, Kava would have been found sooner and the family would have been spared the ordeal of the wait.

“We don’t want what happened to us to happen to someone else, to another family.”

However in 2017, Red Boats owner Andrew Somers said he was confident his staff followed the correct man-overboard procedure.

Kava worked at the Tip Top icecream factory and spent his free time in church or volunteeri­ng to help those less fortunate.

Speedy said “he loved people. He had a beautiful smile, he had a heart as pure as gold and he always put the needs of others before his own.”

It was just before 9.30pm when Kava, who was standing at the back of the boat, leaned on a closed ramp and fell backwards into the water. He couldn’t swim, and just hours earlier had expressed his fear of falling overboard. It was nine days before police found his body in the harbour near Te Atatu.

Cruise operator Red Boats said at the time the ramp wasn’t broken and they were unsure how it was unlocked and untied when the tragedy occurred.

A year after Kava’s death, Maritime NZ laid a charge against Red Boats of failing to comply with a duty, thus exposing people to a risk of death, serious injury or illness.

When she finds old photos of when we were kids she still gets upset. Ngaire Speedy, cousin

 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Ngaire Speedy with portraits of cousin Tevita Kava, who died during a party on a charter boat.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Ngaire Speedy with portraits of cousin Tevita Kava, who died during a party on a charter boat.
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