The cruise ship, Pacific Sun, is helped into berth by tugs
Passengers and crew could have been killed on a cruise
ship rocked by a severe storm north of New Zealand last winter,
an official report says.
The Pacific Sun rolled up to 31 degrees, injuring 77 of the
more than 2000 people on board the P&O cruise ship bound
for Auckland on July 30.
The injuries ranged from cuts and bruises to broken bones,
while one passenger had part of a finger amputated.
The report, by British maritime officials, obtained by The
Herald on Sunday but not yet shown to passengers, concluded
it was "pure good fortune" that no one was more seriously
injured or even killed by unsecured equipment and
furnishings.
Procedures for securing such furnishings, which included a
grand piano, casino gaming machines and tables, brought in
after an earlier accident on another ship, were not
"sufficiently robust", the report said.
It said the Pacific Sun's captain was placed in a difficult
situation by the ship's tight schedule, which had placed the
vessel in the worst sea conditions.
The crew were unable to see or monitor abnormal swells of up
to 7m in darkness and its stabilisers were inoperative, with
one worn out and the other useless at the slow speed of the
ship.
The ship's satellite system was also damaged in the accident,
while passengers became alarmed after seeing crew wearing
lifejackets while they were not, the report said.
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