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More than 700 feared dead in Philippine ferry disaster
By Dante Pastrana
25 June 2008
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The MV Princess of the Stars, one of the largest passenger
ferries in the Philippines, keeled over in raging seas whipped
up by typhoon Fenshen last Saturday. More than 850 passengers
and crew were on board, including at least 20 children and 33
infants.
Despite the efforts of rescuers, few survivors have been found43
as of yesterday, according to the Coast Guard. Philippine Civil
Defence chief Anthony Golez put the figure slightly higher at
57. Rescue divers yesterday reported finding hundreds of bodies
inside the upturned hull. Navy spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Edgar
Arevalo told the media that the priority now is to extricate
the bodies.
The vessel, owned by Sulpicio Lines, departed from Manila last
Friday, bound for Cebu City despite storm warnings from the national
weather bureau. It ran headlong the next day into the typhoon,
which had shifted from its northeasterly path. Waves driven by
winds of 115 kilometres an hour, gusting up to 150 kilometres
an hour, battered the ship. By noon the same day, according to
the Philippine Daily Inquirer, the Southern Tagalog Coast
Guard Station had picked up a distress signal from the ferry,
saying it had engine trouble and was listing.
A crew member who survived, Renato Lanorias, later reported
the ship sank in just 15 minutes after the strong winds and huge
waves apparently broke the lashing that held the cargo. The swift
capsizing left most passengers with no time to jump free or clamber
into the ships 14 life rafts. The ship ran aground off Sibuyan
Island in the central Philippines.
The government moved quickly to find a scapegoat. On Sunday,
speaking via phone from the US, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
publicly berated Coast Guard chief, Vice Admiral Wilfredo Tamayo,
for allowing the ship to depart Manila amid the storm warnings.
Tamayo, however, responded by pointing out that current regulations
allowed large ships to disregard storm warnings below signal no.
3. The Princess of the Stars was over 23,000 tonnes.
Arroyo has demanded a review of the maritime regulations. Justice
Minister Raul Gonzales continued the offensive yesterday by suggesting
that the Coast Guard and Marina (Maritime Industry Authority)
be excluded from the official inquiry. The government slapped
a ban on Sulpicio Line ships leaving port, but according to Agence
France Press the company was still selling tickets, saying it
had not been formally notified of the decision.
Arroyos display of concern is a sham. The maritime regulations
are in line with the systematic deregulation of the domestic shipping
industry under the current and previous administrations. Since
the late 1980s, chronically under-funded and politically-influenced
government agencies have essentially allowed the industry to regulate
itself in relation to safety standards and seaworthiness.
According to an ABS-CBN article, a 1998 Senate investigation
into the sinking of another Sulpicio Line ship, the Doña
Marilyn, revealed that ship inspection was not as thorough
and only limited to the submission of required documents. No inspections
were done [to determine] whether the ships were adequately equipped
or whether the storage and lashing of cargo were in order.
The end result is an appalling safety record, with an average
of more than 200 accidents every year. Since 1987, there have
been 10 major ferry disasters in the Philippines, in which a total
of more than 5,000 people have died. On Saturday, another transport
ship Lake Paoy also sunk during the storm leaving three people
dead.
Yet, as Bob Cottie from the Maritime Accident Casebook
website noted, not a single ferry company or ship owner
has been brought to book in any incident in the Philippines.
Neither had the Philippines lodged a single maritime casualty
investigative report with the International Maritime Organisation
as required by the terms of its membership. Investigative reports
from the board of inquiries have not been made public.
Gisela Bichler-Robertson, director of the Crime Prevention
Analysis Lab, pointed out in a 2001 paper that the following are
generally accepted as being indicative of corporate attempts
to maximise profit at the expense of safety including, but not
limited to: registration with a flag of convenience (FOC), vessel
age (over 20 years old), poor vessel maintenance, inoperable auxiliary
equipment, loading beyond legal capacity, and failure to keep
an accurate manifest.
The domestic shipping industry is allowed to operate vessels
up to 30 years old. MV Princess of the Stars was 24 years old.
Republic Act No. 9295 signed by Arroyo even provides tax incentives
for shipping lines to purchase ships up to 15-years of age.
Sulpicio Lines has a notoriously bad safety record, including
shoddy maintenance and overloading of its ships. Since 1987, four
of its ships have sunk. The worst tragedythat of the Doña
Paz in 1987resulted in more than 4,300 deaths. The Doña
Marilyn sank in 1988 with 300 deaths, and in 1998 the Princess
of the Orient went down, killing 200 people.
A board of inquiry into the Doña Paz sinking found that
the ship was overloaded by more 2,500 passengers, had no radio
and its lifejackets were locked away. The Doña Marilyn
struck a typhoon and its engines reportedly failed. Forty-six
survivors were found not to have been listed on the ships
manifest. In the latest tragedy last weekend, 9 of the 42 currently
listed survivors were not on the official manifest.
According to the Manila Times, Sulpicio Lines posted
a net loss in 2006 of $5.31 million. The company attributed the
result to a 14.7 percent drop in passenger revenues. From $24.65
million in 2005, it earned just $19.96 million in 2006.
Arroyo ally and house speaker, Prospero Nograles, issued a
press statement on Monday demanding that Sulpicio Lines
authority to operate be cancelled. Why is Sulpicio, which
has the worst sea safety record in the Philippines, still being
allowed to operate? he added.
The answer is grim but simple: under capitalism, profits come
before safety. And for all its present posturing, once the political
storm has blown over, the Arroyo administration will do nothing
to fundamentally alter those priorities.
See Also:
Philippines: Spiralling rice prices bring
hunger to millions
[19 June 2008]
Overloaded ferry sinks
in the Philippines killing at least 42 people
[31 December 1999]
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