Google – AFP, 4 November 2013
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Thai
rescuers evacuate an injured foreign tourist after a ferry sank off the
coast
in Pattaya on November 3, 2013 (AFP)
|
Pattaya —
Thai rescuers Monday recounted frantic efforts to pluck terrified survivors
from the sea after a crowded tourist ferry sank, leaving six dead including
three foreigners, as police searched for the captain who fled.
The tragedy
raised new questions about safety standards in the kingdom, which drew a record
22 million tourists last year but is struggling to shake off a reputation for
lax regulation.
Three
Thais, one person from Hong Kong and two other unidentified foreigners were
among the dead, according to officials in the tourist resort of Pattaya, around
150 kilometres (100 miles) southeast of Bangkok.
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Thailand:
Deadly ferry accident (AFP)
|
"The
boat went down in minutes. I saw people -- some with life jackets, some without
-- in the water. One man was holding on to a gas cylinder. There was a body
face down in the water.
They were all panicking, shouting for help," said a local dive guide who was one of the first on the scene.
They were all panicking, shouting for help," said a local dive guide who was one of the first on the scene.
"We
pulled 60 people from the water, including a Russian boy. We gave him CPR
(cardiopulmonary resuscitation) but he was in a very bad way," she said,
asking not to be named.
Police said
that apart from the six dead, all of the 150-200 others on the boat --
including many Russians -- were believed to have been rescued. Nineteen people
were injured.
"We
don't expect to find any more dead. One Russian boy is seriously ill in
intensive care," said Pattaya police chief Colonel Suwarn Chiewnawintawat.
"The
captain ran away. We will issue an arrest warrant for him," he said.
"Divers will recover the boat today. We still don't know the cause."
Stunned tourists
were seen being led to safety on shore on Sunday where they were met by dozens
of ambulances along Pattaya's neon-lit beachfront. Medics performed emergency
first aid on injured passengers.
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This
general view shows the beach along
the coast of the Thai holiday resort of
Pattaya, on September 22, 2006
(AFP/File, Indranil Mukherjee)
|
"We
still don't know the reason for the accident. I am not sure if there are more
dead or not, because we don't know how many people were on the boat," said
Thai rescue diver Suttipong Boonmachai.
"Today
we are going to recover the boat. We will use underwater detection
equipment," he told AFP on Pattaya's main pier.
A local
boat captain who witnessed the tragedy recounted throwing life jackets to
passengers in the water.
"I saw
100 people -- most of them foreigners -- in the water," he said. "I
threw 50 life jackets into the water. There was one man, he was not breathing.
We pulled him out of the water."
On
Pattaya's main pier it was business as usual Monday for the operators of
double-decker wooden ferries preparing to take tourists out on day cruises.
"After
an accident like this the boats should be grounded for checks but today they
are all running," said a European working in the town's marine tourism
industry, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"The
boats are very old. There's no maintenance. They are always overcrowded...
there's no head count."
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Thai
rescuers administer first aid and
perform CPR to injured foreign tourists
after
a ferry sank off the coast in Pattaya
on November 3, 2013 (AFP)
|
Diplomats
from China and the European Union have voiced concern at the number of
incidents involving their tourists.
In May more
than 100 people were rescued from a tourist ferry which began to sink in rough
seas near the tourist island of Phuket.
Two Chinese
tourists were killed and several others injured in August when a speedboat in
which they were travelling crashed in Pattaya.
Last month
an Indian woman died when a boat propeller struck her head while she was
parasailing on her honeymoon in the same resort.
Other
high-profile safety incidents in the kingdom include a fire at a nightclub in
August 2012 on the island of Phuket that left four people dead including two foreigners.




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