A Chinese tourist who remained trapped and undetected under
an overturned jet-boat drowned before rescuers could
"reasonably" determine that a passenger was missing, a
Transport Accident Investigation Commission report has found.
The report, released on Thursday, said the driver had no way
of knowing if anyone was still trapped under the hull.
"By the time help arrived, and with it the first opportunity
to make a head count, it is highly likely the deceased had
already succumbed," it said.
Yan Wang (42) died and six people were injured (one moderate,
five minor) when a Kawarau Jet boat carrying 22 passengers
flipped on the Shotover River on September 25, 2008.
Ms Wang's body was found under the upturned hull 90 minutes
after the boat overturned. Investigator-in-charge Iain Hill's
report said "unnecessary delays" occurred in accounting for
all the passengers but they did not contribute to her death.
His report found there was sufficient space under the
overturned boat for the driver and passengers to escape.
However, Ms Wang could have been trapped, disoriented, have
inhaled water or her lifejacket could have forced her up
under the hull.
The majority of the passengers were not English speakers and
said later they had not understood the safety briefing. Many
could not remember seeing the safety card and they were not
assisted in fitting their lifejackets, "although, in this
case, the delivery of the pre-trip safety briefing did not
affect the outcome of the accident", Mr Hill said.
He recommended lifejackets should be properly fitted and the
drivers should take time to ensure passengers understood the
briefing, rather than performing it in a "robotic fashion".
The report said the jet-boat touched an exposed shingle bar
at the confluence of the Shotover and Kawarau Rivers while
making a high-speed turn, causing it to roll over and come to
rest upside down.
It found that another fully loaded jet boat, travelling
upstream, had crossed ahead and had caused the water to be
drawn from the shingle bar, exposing it in front of the
oncoming boat. This effect had not been considered in safety
planning or driver training.
Many of the passengers were thrown out of the boat and
floated down river. Others were trapped underneath but
managed to work themselves free or were helped out.
The driver checked both sides of the boat to see if any other
passengers were still trapped underneath but could not see
any.
The driver of the other jet-boat on the river dropped off his
passengers on one of the exposed sand bars, picked up
passengers from the water and transported them back to the
sand bar.
"The two drivers attempted to carry out a head count. They
had difficulty because the passengers from the two jet-boats
... were mingling. The passengers were later to say that some
were aware that one was missing, but had some difficulty
relating that information to the drivers," the report said.
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