Yahoo – AFP,
Ljubomir Milasin, 30 Dec 2014
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| A survivor of the Norman Atlantic hugs her children after arriving at the Elefsina military airport in Athens on December 29, 2014 (AFP) |
Survivors
of the Norman Atlantic ferry disaster described chaos, panic, and anger as they
sought to escape the vessel after it burst into flames in stormy weather
Sunday.
"It
was panic because there were over 400 of us who were all supposed to use the
same emergency exit," Greek passenger Urania Thireou told AFP at a hotel
in the Italian port city of Brindisi, after waiting 23 hours on the burning
ship to be rescued.
"There
were crew members around, but even they were panicked (because) it was
impossible to organise so many people," Thireou said.
![]() |
A photo
grab from a video by the Marina
Militare Italiana on December 29, 2014,
shows the rescue operation of passengers
by helicopter from the Norman Atlantic,
adrift in the Adriatic Sea off Albania
|
French
passenger Philippe Moyses gave an equally emotional account of
"terror" amid the disaster, during which he "looked death in the
face" in a way that has deeply marked him.
"This
morning I got up (after) sleeping like a log, I sat on the edge of the bed,
and... I just started crying," Moyses, a 62-year-old resident of Bordeaux,
said from his hotel after being among the last passengers lifted by helicopter
from the burning ferry.
Thireou
said the lack of coordination aboard in responding in the emergency early on
was the most critical failing in the catastrophe, which as of Tuesday afternoon
had claimed a provisional total of 13 lives.
"At
the start, there were people who got into the biggest lifeboat," she told
AFP of the amorphous rushing of passengers. "They got it into the water,
but we were told afterwards that they were not rescued."
Despite
that news and the bleak situation aboard the Norman Atlantic, Thireou says she
quickly focused all her energy and emotions on surviving the calamity.
"I
wasn't scared of dying then, (and) I understood that I had to remain
positive," Thireou says.
"I was
also angry, and this anger kept me alive (and) gave me strength, though I lost
that courage when night fell."
Look
death in the face
Moyses
similarly described an atmosphere of growing dread as passengers counted hours
ticking by during the long and laborious rescue operation.
"There
were 30 men left to evacuate at the end," the Frenchman recalled.
"There were flames under the floorboards. I nearly passed out, and they
lifted me out by helicopter.
![]() |
Rescued
passenger of the Norman Atlantic
accident Marko Gondolo, 40, holds his
daughter
Serafina, 5, at the airport in
Elefsina, Greece, on December 29, 2014
|
Moyses, one
of ten French passengers on the ferry, paid tribute to the Italian military
helicopter pilots who performed rescue flights in the midst of a violent storm,
often at night, and at times as heavy black smoke billowed around the ship.
Thireou was
also quick to thank rescuers, authorities involved, and in particular "the
truck drivers aboard who tried several times, black with smoke, to hook the
rescue tug's cable to the ferry."
Two
Albanian sailors died when one of those cables snapped during rescue
operations.
Wearing Red
Cross-supplied slippers because all his luggage was lost in the ferry fire,
Moyses said moves were afoot to get him outfitted again.
"I'm
going with the (French) ambassador to buy shoes," he said, leaving his
hotel to meet with diplomats who have assisted French nationals as they were
brought from the ferry back to land.
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