Survivors from
a luxury cruise ship that ran aground and tipped over, leaving at least
three dead and 69 people still unaccounted for, described Saturday a
chaotic evacuation, as plates and glasses crashed and they crawled along
upended hallways trying to reach safety.
Based on information provided by local
authorities, the U.S. Embassy in Rome estimates that 130 Americans may
have been on board.
The Embassy says there are no reports of
serious injuries to American citizens, though not all of the Americans
believed to have been present on the ship at the time of the accident
have been accounted for.
Three bodies were recovered from the sea
after the Costa Concordia ran aground off the tiny island of Giglio near
the coast of Tuscany late Friday, tearing a 160-foot gash in its hull
and sending in a rush of water.
The ANSA news agency quoting the prefect's
office in the province of Grosseto as saying that authorities have
accounted for 4,165 of the 4,234 people who had boarded the liner.
By morning Saturday, the ship was lying
virtually flat off Gigio's coast, its starboard side submerged in the
water and the huge gash showing clearly on its upturned hull.
Passengers described a scene reminiscent of
"Titanic", complaining the crew failed to give instructions on how to
evacuate and once the emergency became clear, delayed lowering the
lifeboats until the ship was listing too heavily for many of them to be
released.
Helicopters plucked to safety some people
who were trapped on the ship, some survivors were rescued by boats in
the area, and witnesses said some people jumped from the ship into the
dark, cold sea. Coast guard rescuers were continuing to search the ship
for passengers.
Authorities still hadn't counted all the survivors by the time they reached mainland 12 hours later.
The evacuation drill was only scheduled for Saturday afternoon, even
though some passengers had already been on board for several days.
"It was so unorganized, our evacuation drill
was scheduled for 5 p.m.," said Melissa Goduti, 28, of Wallingford,
Connecticut, who had set out on the cruise of the Mediterranean hours
earlier. "We had joked 'What if something had happened today?"'
"Have you seen 'Titanic?' That's exactly
what it was," said Valerie Ananias, 31, a schoolteacher from Los Angeles
who was traveling with her sister and parents on the first of two
cruises around the Mediterranean. They all bore dark red bruises on
their knees from the desperate crawl they endured along nearly vertical
hallways and stairwells, trying to reach rescue boats.
"We were crawling up a hallway, in the dark,
with only the light from the life vest strobe flashing," her mother,
Georgia Ananias, 61 said. "We could hear plates and dishes crashing,
people slamming against walls."
She choked up as she recounted the moment
when an Argentine couple handed her their 3-year-old daughter, unable to
keep their balance as the ship lurched to the side and the family found
themselves standing on a wall. "He said 'take my baby,"' Mrs. Ananias
said, covering her mouth with her hand as she teared up. "I grabbed the
baby. But then I was being pushed down. I didn't want the baby to fall
down the stairs. I gave the baby back. I couldn't hold her.
"I thought that was the end and I thought they should be with their baby," she said.
"I wonder where they are," daughter Valerie whispered.
The family said they were some of the last
off the ship, forced to shimmy along a rope down the exposed side of the
ship to a waiting rescue vessel below.
Survivor Christine Hammer, from Bonn,
Germany, shivered near the harbor of Porto Santo Stefano, on the
mainland, after stepping off a ferry from Giglio. She was wearing
elegant dinner clothes -- a gray cashmere sweater, a silk scarf -- along
with a large pair of hiking boots, which a kind islander gave her after
she lost her shoes in the scramble to escape. Left behind in her cabin
were her passport, credit cards and phone.
Hammer, 65, told The Associated Press that
she was eating her first course, an appetizer of cuttlefish, sauteed
mushrooms and salad, on her first night aboard her first-ever cruise,
which was a gift to her and her husband, Gert, from her local church
where she volunteers.
Suddenly, "we heard a crash. Glasses and
plates fell down and we went out of the dining room and we were told it
wasn't anything dangerous," she said.
Several passengers concurred, saying crew
members for a good 45 minutes told passengers there was a simple
"technical problem" that had caused the lights to go off. Seasoned
cruisers, however, knew better and went to get their life jackets from
their cabins and report to their "muster stations," the emergency
stations each passenger is assigned to, they said.
Once there, though, crew members delayed lowering the lifeboats even thought the ship was listing badly, they said.
"We had to scream at the controllers to
release the boats from the side," said Mike van Dijk, a 54-year-old from
Pretoria, South Africa. "We were standing in the corridors and they
weren't allowing us to get onto the boats. It was a scramble, an
absolute scramble."
Passengers Alan and Laurie Willits from
Wingham, Ontario, celebrating their 30th wedding anniversary, said they
were watching the magic show in the ship's main theater when they felt
an inital lurch, as if from a severe steering maneuver, followed a few
seconds later by a "shudder" that tipped trash cans over. The subsequent
listing of the ship made the theater curtains seem like they were
standing on their side.
"And then the magician disappeared," Laurie
Willits said, saying the magician left the stage and panicked audience
members fled for their cabins as well.
Once at their life boat station, crew
members directed passengers to go upstairs from the fourth floor deck;
Alan Willits said he refused.
"I said 'no this isn't right.' And I came
out and I argued 'When you get this boat stabilized, I'll go up to the
fifth floor then," he said. Eventually, his lifeboat was lowered down.
But things didn't improve for passengers once aboard the lifeboats or on land.
"No one counted us, neither in the life
boats nor on land," said Ophelie Gondelle, 28, a French military officer
from Marseille. She said there had been no evacuation drill since she
boarded in Marseille, France on Jan. 8.
As dawn neared, a painstaking search of the
950-foot long ship's interior was being conducted to see if anyone might
have been trapped inside, Paolillo said.
"There are some 2,000 cabins, and the ship
isn't straight," Paolillo said, referring to the Concordia's dramatic
more than 45-degree tilt. "I'll leave it to your imagination to
understand how they (the rescuers) are working as they move through it."
Some Concordia crew members were still aboard to help the coast guard rescuers, he said.
Paolillo said it wasn't immediately known if the dead were passengers or
crew, nor were the nationalities of the victims immediately known. It
wasn't clear how they died.
Some 30 people were reported injured, most
of them suffering only bruises, but at least two people were reported in
grave condition. Several passengers came off the ferries on stretchers,
but it appeared more out of exhaustion and shock than serious injury.
Some passengers, apparently in panic, had
jumped off the boat into the sea, witnesses said. Authorities were
trying to obtain a full passenger and crew list from Costa, so they
could do a roll call to determine who might be missing.
The evacuees were taking refuge in schools,
hotels, and a church on the tiny island of Giglio, a popular vacation
isle about 18 miles off Italy's central west coast. Those evacuated the
port of Porto Santo Stefano on the nearby mainland.
Passengers sat dazed in a middle school
opened for them, wrapped in wool or aluminum blankets, with some wearing
their life preservers and their shoeless feet covered with aluminum
foil. Civil protection crews served them warm tea and bread, but
confusion reigned supreme as passengers tried desperately to find the
right bus to begin their journey home.
Tanja Berto, from Ebenfurth, Austria, was
shuttled from one line to another with her mother and 2-year-old son
Bruno, trying to figure out how to get back to Savona, where they began
their cruise a week ago.
"It's his birthday today," she said of her
son, rolling her eyes as she held Bruno and tended to her mother, who
had grown faint and was lying on the ground. "Happy birthday, Bruno."
Survivors far outnumbered Giglio's 1,500
residents, and island Mayor Sergio Ortelli issued an appeal for
islanders -- "anyone with a roof" -- to open their homes to shelter the
evacuees.
Paolillo said the exact circumstances of the
accident were still unclear, but that the first alarm went off about
10:30 p.m., about three hours after the Concordia had begun its voyage
from the port of Civitavecchia, en route to its first port of call,
Savona, in northwestern Italy.
The coast guard official, speaking from the
port captain's office in the Tuscan port of Livorno, said the vessel
"hit an obstacle" -- it wasn't clear if it might have hit a rocky reef
in the waters off Giglio -- "ripping a gash 160 feet across" in the side
of the ship, and started taking on water.
The cruise liner's captain, Paolillo said,
then tried to steer his ship toward shallow waters, near Giglio's small
port, to make evacuation by lifeboat easier. But after the ship started
listing badly, lifeboat evacuation was no longer feasible, Paolillo
said.
Five helicopters, from the coast guard, navy
and air force, were taking turns airlifting survivors still aboard and
ferrying them to safely. A coast guard member was airlifted aboard the
vessel to help people get aboard a small basket so they could be hoisted
up to the helicopter, said Capt. Cosimo Nicastro, another Coast Guard
official.
Costa Cruises said the Costa Concordia was
sailing on a cruise across the Mediterranean Sea, starting from
Civitavecchia with scheduled calls to Savona, Marseille, Barcelona,
Palma de Mallorca, Cagliari and Palermo.
It said about 1,000 Italian passengers were
onboard, as well as more than 500 Germans, about 160 French and about
1,000 crew members.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
The Concordia had a previous accident in
Italian waters, ANSA reported. In 2008, when strong winds buffeted
Palermo, the cruise ship banged against the Sicilian port's dock, and
suffered damage but no one was injured, ANSA said. Source: foxnews.com
|