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Will
SuperFerry ghosts haunt inquiry?
Philippine
Star
03/26/04
Its
a gory business for any search and retrieval operation involving
marine accidents. The SuperFerry 14 tragedy, which happened last
Feb. 27, is no exception.
Relatives of
missing passengers were appalled at the very slow response of the
Philippine Coast Guard Authority (PCGA) and the reluctant logistics
assistance of the Aboitiz controlled WG&A, owner of the ill-starred
vessel.
Even the supposedly
promised task force between the Coast Guard and WG&A has not
materialized. Of not much help either was the special task force
formed by the Office of the President after the families of the
victims made desperate pleas to the government through the media.
As disheartened
relatives many of who still had not a single clue as to what
happened to their missing kin made their agonizing trip back
home, the Special Board of Marine Inquiry (SBMI) started its formal
investigation of the sea tragedy.
After media
hype, perilous ships are back.
In the meantime,
media coverage of this latest maritime disaster has started to wane.
Coverage of the story, as expected, has been pushed to the inside
pages. The SuperFerry 14 tragedy has become just another incident,
a statistic that is added to a growing list of shipping disasters.
It seems that
we never learn. Each maritime accident that has occurred during
the past 10 years and claimed more than 500 lives and millions of
pesos worth of damage to property and to the environment undergoes
the same futile cycle.
We never learn.
A couple of days of media hype on the search, rescue and retrieval
operations is followed by weeks of a long slow-moving inquiry. After
a while, it is business as usual for the negligent ship owners as
they ply hand-me downs vessels and continue to expose the riding
public to the perils of the Philippine nautical highways.
It appears that
the wounds impaled by the latest tragedy involving the Aboitiz-owned
SuperFerry 14 are now fading scars. Unless, there are really ghosts
and they start haunting those who are responsible for our unsafe
seas.
Questions
Needing Answers
We do not want
to pre-empt the inquiry being conducted of the SuperFerry 14 tragedy.
There are, however, questions that many are raising regarding the
fire that caused the sinking of the ferry boat.
For instance,
why did the fire spread so fast? Why was it so uncontrollable so
quickly? The heat generated within a short period of time must have
been so intense as to affect the ships structure causing it
to list on one side and eventually sink.
What happened
to the fire sprinkler system and other fire fighting facilities
that are prescribed to be on board and fully operational? What about
the fire fighting team which is a critical and standard component
of a ships crew?
We understand
that SuperFerry 14 was formerly an old ferryboat that was reconfigured
and refurbished to increase passenger capacity and accommodate other
amenities. The question now is whether fire resistant materials
were used as prescribed by international safety standards. Or, were
the construction materials used merely plain plywood and sub-standard
materials that could easily catch fire?
Terrorist
Bogeyman?
Media reports
about the possibility of a terrorist act as the cause of the tragedy
alarmed several sectors.
Sources in the
insurance industry are saying that such a finding would considerably
increase insurance premiums as Lloyds (a very influential entity
in the insurance business) may classify the Philippines as a "war
zone" thus making war risk insurance coverage more costly.
If this happens,
international shipping companies will by-pass Philippine ports unless
they are compensated for the increase in insurance cost. This scenario
will not only be a mud in the face of the "Strong Republic
Nautical Highway," but also the back-breaker of our fragile
economy.
Whoever had
the bright idea of using a terrorist as a bogeyman to cover up faults
of the ship owner or the ship captain or even any responsible government
officials should be fed immediately to the sharks roaming in Philippine
waters.
Motoring
Journalists As Change Agents
Congratulations
to the officers and members of the Society of Philippine Motoring
Journalists (SPMJ) for a successful "golf-for-a-cause"
event held recently at the Riviera Golf and Country Club.
Philippine Stars
Brian Afuang and Ray Butch Gamboa, my brother, together with several
other motoring journalists established the SPMJ to improve traffic
and road safety attitudes of young Filipino drivers. The Society
will produce teaching modules and audiovisuals on traffic and road
safety education geared toward the youth.
SPMJ will also
lobby aggressively in the next Congress for legislative action requiring
the inclusion of traffic and road safety education in the curriculum
for high school levels.
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