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CAIRO, Feb.4 (Xinhuanet) -- Preliminary investigation
on Saturday blamed fire for the sinking of an Egyptian ferry in the Red Sea and
rescue work continued as about 800 out of over 1,400 passengers and crew were
still missing.
The Red Sea Ports Authority said that the number of
survivors of the sunken Egyptian ferry has risen to 389 and that a total of 185
bodies have been recovered so far.
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| Soldiers of the
security army guard at the entrance to the dock in Safaga. [Xinhua
photo] | "Fire erupting in
the engine machinery and the garage was the primary cause of the accident,"
survivors were quoted by the official MENA news agency as saying.
Fire broke out two hours after the ship left the
Dubah Port in Saudi Arabia en route to the Egyptian Red Sea port of Safaga, some
600 km southeast of the capital Cairo, said the survivors who were being treated
in Hurghada General Hospital.
After three hours into the trip, the captain asked
the passengers to leave their private cabins and go up onto the deck before the
ship listed and went down, they added.
Several survivors also complained that they could not
use lifeboats available on the ship.
Meanwhile, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak flew to
the Red Sea city of Hurghada on Saturday to oversee the rescue operation and
visited survivors.
After being briefed on the development of the rescue
work, Mubarak visited survivors at the Hurghada General Hospital, where 100
Egyptians and 12 Saudis were being treated, and the Mubarak Military Hospital
which has received 44 Egyptians and one Syrian.
Mubarak has also ordered urgent aid to the survivors
and families of the missing passengers, according to his spokesman Soliman
Awwad.
Families of the missing will receive some 30,000
Egyptian pounds each (about 5,245 U.S. dollars) and each survivor will receive
15,000 pounds (about 2,622 dollars), Awwad added.
Hundreds of relatives of passengers pushed and shoved
the riot police deployed in front of the Safaga Port Authority, occasionally
breaking through, as frustration built up over the lack of information about
those still missing.
The rescue operation led by Egypt's naval force
continued on the second day of the disaster with the help from the United
States, Saudi Arab and Jordan.
Egyptian officials initially turned down a British
offer to divert a warship to the scene and a U.S. offer to send a P3 Orion
maritime naval patrol aircraft to the area.
But Egypt later reversed the decision and allowed the
Orion which is able to search underwater from the air to reach the accidental
scene.
Saudi Arabia said that two frigates, a supply ship,
four rescue boats and helicopters will be sent from the country to take part in
the rescue operation.
Several Jordanian naval units have also joined the
rescue efforts, Xinhua learned.
The ferry named Al-Salaam 98 carried 1,310
passengers, 104 crew members, 22 cars and 16 trucks.
The ship disappeared from the radar screen shortly
after it left the Saudi port of Dubah at 7:30 p.m. local time (1630 GMT) on
Thursday.
It should have arrived at its destination of Safaga
at 2:30 a.m. (0030 GMT) on Friday.
The 35-year old ship is owned by the Egyptian company
El-Salaam Maritime Transport Co. and it is the second time that a cruiser owned
by the company suffered a major accident in less than four months.
Al-Salaam 95, a sister ship, carrying about 1,250
Muslim pilgrims back from Saudi Arabia, collided with a Cypriot commercial
vessel in the Gulf of Suez on Oct. 17, 2005, killing at least three and injuring
dozens of others. Enditem |