Dozens Rescued at Sea after Abandoning Indonesian Ferry

Posted by Joseph R Fonseca
Sunday, December 20, 2015

Dozens of people with life jackets were found floating in Indonesia's Gulf of Bone on Sunday, some clinging to a fish trap, after abandoning their ferry in rough seas off Sulawesi Island, said officials, adding that two passengers had died.

Fishermen found four people alive in a fish trap and took them to hospital in the town of Siwa on Sulawesi island, the head of the local rescue team, Roki Azikin told Reuters.

A transport ministry spokesman said another 21 people were later found at sea.

"(The boat) may be upside down now," Azikin said.

"Other passengers are still out in the sea wearing life jackets and we're evacuating," he added.

The ferry left the southeastern side of Sulawesi on Saturday morning and was heading across the Gulf of Bone for South Sulawesi, transport ministry said.

It was left adrift in rough seas off the coast of south Sulawesi on Saturday night after high winds prevented rescuers from reaching it.

It is unclear how many passengers and crew were onboard.

News website Detik.com on Saturday said 108 people were on the ship, while Kompas.com said it was carrying 122 people.

Three ships have been deployed to find the missing ferry, which police said was still afloat with a broken engine, but out of radio contact.

(Reporting by Agustinus Beo Da Costa)

Categories: Casualties Coast Guard Eye on the Navy Ferries Maritime Safety Navy Offshore People & Company News Vessels

Related Stories

Noatum Maritime Expands, Opens Shanghai Office

TotalEnergies, CMA CGM to Form LNG Bunkering Logistics JV

Bergink Tapped to Head Alfa Laval Marine Division

Current News

US Commerce Disorganization Stalls Thousands of Export Approvals

Russian Oil Vessels Forced to Divert From India Under US Sanctions

Hanseatic Global Terminals Launches Latin America Expansion

Two CK Hutchison-Operated Ports Near Panama Could See State Partnerships Take Over

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News