| GREEK CRUISE SHIP SINKING | |||
| April 10, 2007 | |||
Two passengers still missing, may be trapped in ship Greece's merchant marine minister said Tuesday that he believed human error was involved in the fatal collision and sinking of a cruise ship just off a Greek resort island last week. The minister was speaking after he gave Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis an update on the search operation in Santorini harbour, where the cruise liner Sea Diamond hit rocks and foundered early Friday. Nearly 1,600 people, including 60 Canadian students, were rescued
during a three-hour operation late Thursday, but the bodies of two Merchant Marine Minister Manolis Kefaloyiannis said: "The mechanism of the rescue worked out perfectly. Our attention is now focused on the question of the environment and, of course, to find the missing two.'' "There was human error'' involved in the accident, he said. The missing pair - Frenchman Jean-Christophe Allain, 45, and his 16-year-old daughter Maud - are thought to have been trapped in their flooded cabin. Allain's wife narrowly escaped. Naval divers and a robot submarine on Tuesday were searching the wreckage for the missing pair along with the vessel's voice data recorder, which could provide clues to the accident. The submarine will photograph the position of the vessel - which lies an estimated 70-130 meters below the surface - and determine its stability before divers are allowed to enter the wreck. Meanwhile workers struggled to prevent more oil from spilling from the stricken vessel and harming the coastline of the island, one of the most popular tourist destinations in the Greek archipelago. Over the weekend the ship's captain had told investigators he was
caught unawares by a sea current that swept his vessel onto the volcanic
rocks just minutes before docking - even though his vessel carried
state-of-the-art positioning equipment and the rocks were well marked.
Six crew members, including the captain and chief mate, have been
charged with negligence. |