Mumbai, Dec 18
In a gruesome maritime disaster, at least 13 persons drowned, including three Indian Navy sailors plus another 99 were rescued from the Arabian Sea when a naval speedboat on engine-trials lost control and abruptly rammed into a chockful passenger ferry, near the Raigad Coast, off Gateway of India, here on Wednesday evening, officials said.
The passenger boat, reported to be a private catamaran named āNeelkamalā, was ferrying around 110 tourists plus five crew members to the world-famous UNESCO Heritage Elephanta Islands, and the disaster occurred around 5.15 p.m., said the BMC Disaster Control.
Official sources said that an Indian Navyās rigid inflatable boat undergoing engine trials crashed into the āNeelkamalā at high speed, overturning it and throwing most of the tourists into the Arabian Sea near Uran, Karanja on the Raigad coast, around 10 km from Gateway of India.
The sources said that the ferry, āNeelkamalā, may have broken down with the sudden hit, overturned and started sinking with the passengers thrown into the sea.
Videos of the tragedy, clicked by aghast passengers from other ferries in the vicinity showed gruesome shots of people screaming for help, flailing their arms and legs to remain afloat or attempting to hold their near and dear ones from sinking in chilly sea waters.
On receiving the SOS from multiple sources on the disaster, a massive rescue operation was launched by the Indian Navyās four helicopters and 15 other vessels including the Marine Police, Indian Coast Guard, Jawaharlal Nehru Port Authority, along with local fishers and other ferry boats to save the victims.
By 9 p.m., the authorities confirmed 13 deaths comprising three Indian Navy sailors and 10 civilians, several ācriticalā in different hospitals, and over 100 other tourists whose condition is reported to be āstableā in various hospitals, while search continues for another five still suspected āmissingā as darkness fell.
It was not immediately clear whether the ill-fated āNeelkamalā was carrying passengers as per the stipulated norms for load and other safety measures.
The owner of the vessel, Rajendra Padte, said that the āNeelkamalā had departed on its regular tourism voyage to Elephanta Islands around 3.15 p.m. and barely a couple of hours later the tragedy was reported, ābut it was not our faultā.
āAn Indian Navy speedboat first encircled my boat, then zoomed off, and returned again at high speed and banged into āNeelkamalā. All the tourists were wearing life jackets which are now compulsory. More than a dozen other boats are engaged in the rescue operations,ā a shaken Padte told mediapersons.
A livid Peasants & Workers Party of India (PWP) General Secretary and ex-legislator Jayant P. Patil, who was present at the spot slammed the concerned authorities that resulted in the tragedy and the āNeelkamal sunk into the water soon thereafter.
Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis made a brief statement in the Legislative Assembly in Nagpur, while Deputy CM Eknath Shinde spoke to Mumbai City Collector Sanjay Yadav and Raigad Collector Kisan Jawale, plus Deputy Commissioner of Police (Ports Zone) Sudhakar Pathare, to expedite the rescue operations.
A civic official said that 56 are admitted to the JNPA Hospital, 32 in the Naval Dockyard medical facility, one in INHS Ashvini Hospital, nine in St. George Hospital, and 12 are admitted at a hospital on the mainland at Karanja.
Meanwhile, anxious relatives of many of the victims rushed from different parts of Mumbai and other places to the hospitals where their kin were admitted to get details of their welfare, and the Yellowgate Police Station officials, who are handling the case, had a tough time controlling them.
Indian Navy is likely to order a probe into the deadly collision that left behind many casualties including 13 fatalities, amid fears that the death toll could go up further.
The Elephanta Isles, housing the world-famous group of temples dedicated to Lord Shiva and other Hindu gods and goddesses, that are said to have been cut in rocks between 1,500-2,200 years ago, are one of the must-see tourist destinations of Maharashtra.
(Quaid Najmi can be contacted at: qnajmi@gmail.com)
--IANS
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