Call for inquiry into Pacific ferry that sank with more than 80 people aboard
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A five-metre dinghy adrift at sea in the Pacific Ocean with seven people on board, survivors from a ferry carrying 50 that was reported missing in Kiribati waters.
PHOTO: AFP
WELLINGTON (AFP) - A senior lawmaker on Wednesday (Jan 31) called for an independent inquiry into the disappearance of a Kiribati ferry believed to have sunk in the Pacific with more than 80 people aboard.
A multinational rescue operation is scouring vast swathes of ocean for survivors, but only seven people have been found alive so far and hopes are fading of locating any more.
Former Kiribati prime minister Ieremia Tabai, who represents the island of Nonouti from where the ferry departed on Jan 18, slammed the government's handling of the disaster.
Mr Tabai said his grief-stricken constituents on the island of 2,000 wanted to know why it took eight days to raise the alarm and how the unseaworthy vessel was allowed to sail in the first place.
"This tragedy demands an independent commission of inquiry," he told Radio New Zealand.
"We need to know why it happened and (who is) responsible."
The MV Butiraoi, 17.5m wooden catamaran, set off on a planned two-day voyage to Betio, the largest township of Kiribati's capital, South Tarawa.
Local authorities said it ran aground and underwent repairs to its propeller shaft before it left Nonouti.
Mr Tabai said the vessel was not believed to be carrying mandatory safety equipment such as an emergency locator beacon.
"The government is responsible because they did not look after the situation well, they should have ensured that particular vessel should not have sailed in the first place," he said.
He said the ferry was a free inter-island service that was carrying a large number of high-school students returning to Tarawa before the start of a new term.
More than 80 people were aboard the ferry when it sank, officials confirmed on Wednesday.
Initial estimates of how many people were on the MV Butiraoi when it went missing ranged from 35 to more than 100, but officials said the numbers were slowly becoming clearer.
"Kiribati authorities have confirmed that about 80 passengers plus crew of likely about five were on the ferry," Rescue Coordination Centre NZ said in a statement.
The centre said four aircraft from New Zealand, Australia and the United States had helped conduct sweeps in the area where the ferry went missing. It said the search was concentrating on finding a life raft that was launched from the sinking ferry.
"The life raft is designed for 25 people but more can be squeezed in uncomfortably," it added.
Mr Taibai said the ferry's loss was a tragedy for Kiribati, a nation of 33 atolls and reefs with a population of about 110,000, that lies some 3,460km northeast of Fiji.
"It's a real sad day for those who lost their loved one. For my village, two or three people that I personally know, that live next door in my village, were on that boat and perished."


