11 dead in Haiti ferry capsizing
Associated Press/AP Online
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - An overloaded ferry capsized off the
coast of southern Haiti, killing at least 11 people, U.N. and
Haitian authorities said Sunday.
U.N. peacekeeping mission spokesman David Wimhurst said most
of the 100 people aboard the vessel were able to swim to safety. The
boat sank after taking on water about 150 yards (150 meters) from
shore late Saturday.
Crews recovered 11 bodies from the water according to
Wimhurst and Mayor Evil Lavilette of Pestel, the ferry's departure
point. At least five were children.
The boat was on a slow, two-day journey along the top of
Haiti's southern peninsula, transporting passengers, food and
charcoal to the capital, Port-au-Prince. It made several stops to
take on passengers and cargo and was "overcrowded,"
according to Wimhurst.
Lavilette said a passenger called him in distress as the
boat foundered, but emergency crews were not able to reach the ferry
quickly because the closest rescue boat was out of gas.
U.N. peacekeepers and Haitian police arrived later to help
survivors on the western outskirts of Port-au-Prince, Wimhurst said.
Bad roads and a lack of infrastructure force many on the
coastline in impoverished Haiti to depend on rickety ferries.
Some 500 to 700 people were killed in 1993 when an
overcrowded ferry traveling a similar route sank. At least nine
people died last year when a ferry hit a sandbar near the tip of the
southern peninsula.
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