Monday 29 December 2014




View of the rescue operations of the ferry Norman Atlantic on fire in the Adriatic Sea, 28 December 2014


 


Passenger Nick Channing-Williams: "Panic set in when the floor caught fire and the paint started bubbling"

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The death toll following a fire on the Norman Atlantic ferry off Corfu has risen to seven, with the evacuation of all those on board now complete.
One man was killed when trying to escape the ship, and a further six bodies have since been found.
More than 400 people have been rescued, in a long and complex operation amid gale-force winds and thick smoke.
The captain of the ferry was the last to be rescued, more than 36 hours after sending out a distress signal.
It is unclear what caused the fire to break out on Sunday on the car deck of the ferry, which was carrying 478 people from the Greek city of Patras to Ancona in Italy.
Map showing the route of the ship Norman Atlantic travelling from Greece to Italy
Italian prosecutors announced on Monday that they had opened a criminal investigation into the fire and would look into whether negligence had played a role.
A 62-year-old Greek man was the first of the fatalities to be recovered. He and his wife, who was injured, had fallen into the water as they tried to reach a lifeboat.
Teodora Douli, 56, told Ansa news agency that her husband may have hit his head as he fell. "I tried to save him but I couldn't," she said.
Greek Coast Guard spokesman Nikos Lagadianos said six more bodies were found on Monday.
Hypothermia Helicopters crews fitted with night vision equipment had worked through the night to rescue passengers despite difficult conditions.
Italian Air Force helicopter pilot, Maj Antonio Laneve told Italian state TV that "acrid smoke" had filled his helicopter cabin, making the rescue even more challenging.
People were taken off the ship individually by helicopter, an Italian navy spokesperson said.
A wounded passenger among 49 survivors evacuated from the burning ferry "Norman Atlantic arrives aboard a cargo container ship to the harbour of Bari on December 29, 2014. More than 100 people were rescued during the night, despite challenging conditions
Passenger being taken to hospital Some of the passengers have needed treatment for hypothermia
The Italian coast guard carries a body during an operation to rescue a stricken Italian ferry The body of a man who died trying to leave the ship was found in a lifeboat escape chute
Most of the rescued passengers were transferred to nearby ships, although some were taken directly to hospital.
Three children and a pregnant woman were among those being treated in hospital for hypothermia, according to the Associated Press news agency.
Passengers described panicking as the heat on the ferry rose, then freezing as they stood on decks awaiting rescue.
The wife of one of the cooks told journalists she had had a call from her husband saying: "I cannot breathe, we are all going to burn like rats - God save us."
Another passenger told Greek TV station Mega: "We are outside, we are very cold, the ship is full of smoke, the boat is still burning, the floors are boiling, underneath the cabins it must be burning since 5 o'clock, the boats that came (to rescue us) are gone, and we are here. They cannot take us."
Coast Guard Adm Giovanni Pettorino said that a member of the Italian military had been injured during the rescue.

Exhausted and separated families are desperate to reunite, as James Reynolds reports
Image of the rescue operations of the ferry Norman Atlantic on fire in the Adriatic Sea, 28 December 2014. Passengers waited anxiously on the ferry's upper decks to be rescued
Vessels try to extinguish the fire at the Italian-flagged Norman Atlantic after it caught fire in the Adriatic Sea, on 28 December 2014 This photo taken by a nearby ship shows other vessels trying to extinguish the flames
'Slight malfunction' Most of those on board were Greek. Mr Lagadianos told AP that 234 passengers and 34 crew members were from the country.
Others came from Italy, Turkey, Albania, Germany and several other countries. Four British nationals have been rescued from the stricken ferry, according to the UK Foreign Office.
The chief executive of the Visentini group that owns the vessel, Carlo Visentini, said the ferry had passed a recent technical inspection despite a "slight malfunction" in one of the fire doors, Italy's Ansa news agency reports.
"The tests confirmed that the boat was in full working order," he said, adding that the fire door had been repaired "to the satisfaction of the inspectors".
Ferries are an important mode of transport between Greece's hundreds of islands as well as neighbouring countries.

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