NEWS REPORTS are extracted from
various sources -
Malaysian, Singapore, UK, Australian Newspapers,
BBC, CNN and Reuters to name but a few .....
Passengers describe luxury liner ordeal
The ship's lifeboats were launched
when the fire got out of control - Survivors have been describing the
terror they experienced as their luxury cruise liner burst into flames and
sank off the coast of Malaysia. The BBC's Michael Peschardt: "A fire
in the engine room swept out of control" At least 146 Britons were
among 1,100 passengers and crew rescued when the Sun Vista ran into
trouble in the Malacca Strait.
They clambered into lifeboats after an
electrical fire broke out in the engine room on Thursday. A spokeswoman
for Sun Cruises said: "There was a fire in the main switchboard in
the engine room at 2.30pm local time." Ferries and naval vessels
responded to an SOS and rescued 472 passengers and 632 crew members as
they scrambled overboard. The survivors were taken to a hotel in the
Malaysian resort of Penang, where they are recovering.
Ten passengers
were sent to Penang Hospital for treatment. The Sun Vista was on its way
back to Singapore after a six-day cruise which took it to the Thai resort
of Phuket. Sun Cruises spokesman Steve Douglas said: "All passengers
and crew have been saved and were at no point in any immediate danger.
Thomas Bonnard, from the UK, said the ship's captain did not tell the
passengers about the fire and he said crew members were "panicky".
Sun Cruises spokesman Stuart Douglas: "We are concentrating on
getting everyone home"
Mr Bonnard, 62, from Guisborough,
Cleveland, said: "At 2.30pm all the lights went out on the ship and
we heard a message over the Tannoy saying `all firefighters' to a certain
area. "Nothing seemed to happen until later in the afternoon, when
the captain came out on deck and said there had been a small electrical
fire in the ship's engine room, but the CO2 (carbon dioxide) system had
gone off and they were going to put things right." "Then he came
out again at about 5.30pm and said the fire was more serious and we were
going to have to abandon ship."
William Gibbons, director of the
Passenger Shipping Association: "Incidents will happen" Mr
Bonnard, who was enjoying a cruise with his wife Barbara, said people
pushed and shoved to get into the lifeboats but overall the evacuation was
quite orderly. He said: "We got our lifejackets on and the lifeboats
were lowered into the sea. "There were some problems getting the
lifeboats off, it took about 10 minutes to lower one end of our boat.
The fire broke while the ship was in the Malacca Strait "Nobody
seemed to want to take charge. Luckily there was an Australian in our boat
who seemed to know what he was doing." Mr Bonnard said: "We
didn't see the ship go down. The last thing we saw the ship was still
smoking, and there was a patch of hull just above the water line that was
absolutely glowing from the heat."
Peter Andrews, 76, from
Rayleigh, Essex, said: "My lifeboat was overloaded, there were 76
people in when the capacity was 45 and the person responsible for it
didn't seem to be very confident." Peter Andrews describes the
unfolding drama on board the Sun Vista He told BBC Radio Essex: "We
had a job to control the boat. We started the engine and it cut out. We
started it again and it still didn't last long. "Eventually we got
the oars out but couldn't make much progress." Geoffrey Todd, from
the West Midlands, went on the cruise with his wife to celebrate their
40th wedding anniversary. He said he had lost his wedding certificates,
rings and a gold watch, as well as all his clothes.