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Feuer Frei!
07-11-11, 02:40 AM
More than 100 people, many of them children, are feared dead after a tourist boat sank in central Russia.
Dozens were rescued after the accident on the River Volga in Tatarstan, about 750km (450 miles) east of Moscow.
At least six deaths are confirmed, but reports say divers have seen numerous bodies inside the sunken vessel.
At least 199 passengers and crew were believed to be on the Bulgaria, which was sailing from the town of Bulgar to the regional capital, Kazan.
Hopes of finding survivors faded as rescuers worked through the night.
Bad weather, mechanical failure on the aged craft and overcrowding have all been cited as possible reasons why the boat sank.
Nearly 50 Russian divers were scouring the murky river early on Monday and Russian media reports suggested they had seen many bodies inside the sunken ship.
Igor Panshin, head of the Emergencies Ministry's Volga Regional Centre, was shown commenting on NTV: "[The divers] were tapping on the hull in hope of getting possible replies. Unfortunately, none came.
"They have now shone light into the holds and the restaurants, and they see that there are [dead bodies of] people inside."
There was little hope of finding more survivors.
The Bulgaria - a 55-year-old vessel which is believed to be owned by a local tourism company - was on a two-day cruise when it got into difficulty at about 1400 on Sunday (1000 GMT), sinking within minutes, says our correspondent.
The 80m (260ft) boat sank several kilometres from the shore near the village of Sukeyevo, about 80km south of Kazan.
One survivor described it as "a bad ship, a very old ship", which had already been listing to starboard when it set sail.


"She went under in three minutes," said the survivor, Nikolai Chernov. "There were no announcements or anything, she just listed to starboard and capsized and sank. That was it."
About 80 people survived the accident, most of them rescued by another pleasure boat that was passing nearby.
However, one survivor revealed that before they were finally rescued other ships had refused to come to their aid.
Weeping survivors draped in blankets were shown on state TV, while relatives gathered at a port in Kazan waiting for news of their loved ones.
"My son-in-law telephoned to say that he held out his hand to his wife but she could not grab on," one man told Rossiya 24 state television. "He could not pull her out."
Around 30 children had gathered in a play area on deck just before the boat went down, said one survivor, who feared all may have drowned.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has ordered an investigation into the incident.


SOURCE (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14099637)

FIREWALL
07-11-11, 03:52 AM
Very sad news.

sidslotm
07-11-11, 04:12 AM
very sad, I wonder what caused this?

Krauter
07-11-11, 05:23 AM
That's a tragedy. Let's hope something like never occurs again :nope:

Feuer Frei!
07-11-11, 05:31 AM
very sad, I wonder what caused this?

Well, an indication is that the vessel wasn't even sea-worthy:
One survivor described it as "a bad ship, a very old ship", which had already been listing to starboard when it set sail.

And this didn't help the cause at all:

one survivor revealed that before they were finally rescued other ships had refused to come to their aid.
Let's see what the investigation brings.
Negligence is certainly top of the list here.

Feuer Frei!
07-11-11, 06:33 AM
What a disaster!

Update:

Negligence claim The Russian authorities have launched a criminal investigation, amid suspicions that negligence contributed to the tragedy.
Russian media report that the boat was overcrowded and that one of its two engines was not working.
Investigators quoted by Itar-Tass news agency said that even before the boat had set sail from Bolgary to Kazan on Sunday one of its two engines had malfunctioned and the vessel had been listing.
The 80m (260ft) boat sank several kilometres from the shore near the village of Sukeyevo, about 80km south of Kazan.


http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/53984000/jpg/_53984950_bulgboatrtr.jpg


SOURCE (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14099637)

Jimbuna
07-11-11, 06:51 AM
Could well be negligence brought about by lack of maintenance and non adherence to whatever safety requirements are supposed to be.

Feuer Frei!
07-11-11, 08:11 AM
Update:

Officials say the boat's capacity was 120 passengers and crew, but it had been carrying 208 people on Sunday
At a government meeting on Monday Mr Medvedev called for "a complete check on all means of passenger transport". Russia had too many "old rust tubs", he complained.
He declared Tuesday a day of mourning across Russia for the Volga River victims
Emergencies Minister Sergei Shoigu said the boat was overcrowded, carrying 208 people, of whom 25 had not been registered as passengers

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/53989000/jpg/_53989081_russia_volga_464.jpg

SOURCE (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14103749)

My condolences to those affected. May the deceased RIP.

Krauter
07-11-11, 08:19 AM
Wow, didn't even make much headway in the trip...

What a shame

Jimbuna
07-11-11, 02:37 PM
Wow, didn't even make much headway in the trip...

What a shame

Probably adds weight to just how bad a condition she was in.

AVGWarhawk
07-11-11, 02:43 PM
I don't think this is the first time we have seen ship capsize from overloading. Bad decision to load more than could be handled.

As far as the broken engine...what was the captain thinking?

Jimbuna
07-11-11, 03:06 PM
I don't think this is the first time we have seen ship capsize from overloading. Bad decision to load more than could be handled.

As far as the broken engine...what was the captain thinking?

An extra fat pay day because of the additional 80+ people on board?

AVGWarhawk
07-11-11, 03:22 PM
An extra fat pay day because of the additional 80+ people on board?

I would say. Passenger carriership generates more money.

Oberon
07-11-11, 03:27 PM
Another case of profit overruling safety I'd wager, such a terrible shame.

Jimbuna
07-11-11, 04:00 PM
If that does turn out to be the case I wouldn't like to be in that skippers shoes :nope:

Feuer Frei!
07-13-11, 09:50 PM
Update:

Russian police have arrested two officials following the sinking of a tourist boat on the Volga in which more than 100 people died.
Both the director of the company that rented the boat and a ship registrar who certified it have been detained, prosecutors said.
Officials have said the boat was overloaded and in poor condition when it sank in the Tatarstan region.
Meanwhile divers have widened their search for bodies of the victims.
So far 104 bodies have been found including those of 23 children.
The 80m (260ft) Bulgaria - a double-decker river cruiser built in 1955 - listed during a thunderstorm on Sunday and sank in minutes, trapping many passengers inside.
About 80 people were rescued.


Officials said the boat was designed for 140 passengers and crew but it had been carrying 208 people. It also lacked the correct licences and one of its engines was not working, prosecutors said.
Russian media have been scathing in their accounts of the tragedy.
The Vedomosti business daily said the accident "shows the logic of neglecting safety in the name of profit".
An editorial in the Komsomolskaya Pravda read: "The owners extracted profit while turning a blind eye to safety rules. People die... because of their tacit acceptance that things are not done the right way."
Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov said the sinking was "lawlessness and a crime" and the ship had a "whole bunch of violations", Interfax news agency reported.


SOURCE (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14147460)



Updated 21:40, 13 July 2011.