MV Doña Paz

MV Doña Paz
Doña Paz berthed at Tacloban in 1984
History
Japan
Name: Himeyuri Maru
Owner: RKK Line
Port of registry: Kagoshima
Builder: Onomichi Dockyard
Yard number: 118
Launched: April 25, 1963
Fate: Sold to Sulpicio Lines
Philippines
Name: Don Sulpicio
Owner: Sulpicio Lines
Port of registry: Manila
Route: Tacloban-Catbalogan-Manila
Acquired: 1975
Renamed: Doña Paz in 1981
Refit: After a fire onboard June 5, 1979
Fate: Caught fire and sank after a collision with the MT Vector on December 20, 1987.
General characteristics
Class and type: Passenger ferry
Tonnage:
  • 2,602
  • 1,192 DWT
Length: 93.1 m (305 ft)
Beam: 13.6 m (45 ft)
Speed: 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph)
Capacity: 1,518 passengers
Crew: 66

MV Doña Paz was a Philippine-registered passenger ferry that sank after colliding with the oil tanker MT Vector on December 20, 1987. Traveling from Leyte island to the Philippine capital of Manila, the vessel was seriously overcrowded, with at least 2,000 passengers not listed on the manifest. In addition, it was claimed that the ship carried no radio and that the life-jackets were locked away. However, official blame was directed at Vector, which was found to be unseaworthy, and operating without a license, lookout or qualified master. With an estimated death toll of 4,386 people and only 24 survivors, it remains the deadliest peacetime maritime disaster in history.

History

Doña Paz was built in 1963 by Onomichi Zosen of Onomichi, Hiroshima, Japan, and was originally named Himeyuri Maru.[1] During the time it travelled Japanese waters, it had a passenger capacity of 608.[2] In 1975, she was sold to Sulpicio Lines, a Filipino operator of a fleet of passenger ferries. It was renamed by Sulpicio Lines as Don Sulpicio, and later, Doña Paz.[2] On June 5, 1979, the vessel was gutted by fire while en route from Manila to Cebu. All 1,164 on board were rescued but the vessel was beached and declared a constructive total loss. The wreck was repurchased from the underwriters by Sulpicio Lines, and the vessel was refurbished and returned to service as Doña Paz.[3] At the time of its sinking, the ship was sailing the route of Manila → TaclobanCatbalogan → Manila and vice versa, making trips twice a week.[4][5]

1987 disaster

Collision

On December 20, 1987, at 06:30, Philippine Standard Time, Doña Paz left from Tacloban, Leyte, for Manila,[4][6] with a stopover at Catbalogan, Samar.[7] The vessel was due in Manila at 04:00 the following day, and it was reported that it last made radio contact at around 20:00.[6] However, subsequent reports indicated that Doña Paz had no radio.[8][9] At around 22:30, the ferry was at Dumali Point, along the Tablas Strait, near Marinduque.[6] A survivor later said that the weather at sea that night was clear, but the sea was choppy.[7] While most of the passengers slept, Doña Paz collided with MT Vector, an oil tanker en route from Bataan to Masbate. Vector was carrying 1,050,000 litres (8,800 US bbl) or 1,041 metric tons (1,041 t) of gasoline and other petroleum products owned by Caltex Philippines.[4]

Upon collision, Vector's cargo ignited and caused a fire on the ship that spread onto Doña Paz. Survivors recalled sensing the crash and an explosion, causing panic on the vessel.[6] One of them, Paquito Osabel, recounted that the flames spread rapidly throughout the ship, and that the sea all around the ship itself was on fire.[6][7] Another survivor, Philippine Constabulary soldier Luthgardo Niedo, claimed that the lights onboard had gone out minutes after the collision, that there were no life vests to be found on Doña Paz, and that all of the crewmen were running around in panic with the other passengers and that none of the crew gave any orders nor made any attempt to organize the passengers.[7] It was later said that the life jacket lockers had been locked.[9] The survivors were forced to jump off the ship and swim among charred bodies in flaming waters around the ship, with some using suitcases as makeshift flotation devices.[10] Doña Paz sank within two hours of the collision, while Vector sank within four hours.[9] Both ships sank in about 545 meters (1,788 ft) of water in the shark-infested Tablas Strait.[11]

Rescue

Skippers, medics, and officers as well as the captain of a passing inter-island ship, MS Don Claudio, witnessed the explosion of the two ships and after an hour, found the survivors of Doña Paz. The officers of Don Claudio threw a net for the survivors to climb to. In all, only 26 survivors were retrieved from the water: 24 of them were passengers from Doña Paz while the other 2 were crewmen from Vector's 13-man crew.[7][12] None of the crew of Doña Paz survived. Most of the survivors sustained burns from jumping into the flaming waters.[6] Doctors and nurses aboard the vessel tended to their injuries. It reportedly took eight hours before Philippine maritime authorities learned of the accident, and another eight hours to organise search-and-rescue operations.[9]

Casualties

According to the initial announcement made by Sulpicio Lines, the official passenger manifest of Doña Paz recorded 1,493 passengers and 59 crew members aboard.[2][10] According to Sulpicio Lines, the ferry was able to carry 1,424 passengers.[6] A revised manifest released on December 23, 1987, showed 1,583 passengers and 58 crew members on Doña Paz, with 675 persons boarding the ferry in Tacloban, and 908 coming on board in Catbalogan.[11] However, an anonymous official of Sulpicio Lines told UPI that, since it was the Christmas season, tickets were usually purchased illegally aboard the ship at a cheaper rate, and those passengers were not listed on the manifest.[2] The same official added that holders of complimentary tickets and non-paying children below the age of four were likewise not listed on the manifest.[2][13]

Survivors claimed that it was possible that Doña Paz may have carried as many as 3,000 to 4,000 passengers.[2][10] They took as signs that the ferry was overcrowded the fact that they saw passengers sleeping along corridors, on the boat decks, or on cots with three or four persons on them.[10] Of the 21 bodies that had been recovered and identified as passengers on the ship five days after the accident, only one of the fatalities was listed on the official manifest. Of the 24 passengers who survived, only five were listed on the manifest.[14]

On December 28, 1987, Representative Raul Daza of Northern Samar claimed that at least 2,000 passengers on board Doña Paz were not on the ship's manifest.[15] He based that figure on a list of names furnished by relatives and friends of missing people believed aboard the ferry, the names having been compiled by radio and television stations in Tacloban.[15] The names of these 2,000+ missing passengers were published in pages 29 to 31 of the December 29, 1987, edition of the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

In February 1988 the Philippine National Bureau of Investigation stated, on the basis of interviews with relatives, that there were at least 3,099 passengers and 59 crew on board, giving 3,134 on-board fatalities.[16] In January 1999 a presidential task force report estimated, on the basis of court records and more than 4,100 settlement claims, that there were 4,341 passengers.[17] Subtracting the 24 surviving passengers, and adding 58 crew gives 4,375 on-board fatalities. Adding the 11 dead from the Vector crew, the total becomes 4,386.[3]

Reactions and aftermath

President Corazon Aquino described the accident as "a national tragedy of harrowing proportions...[the Filipino people's] sadness is all the more painful because the tragedy struck with the approach of Christmas".[18] Pope John Paul II, Japanese Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita and Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom conveyed their official messages of condolence.[19] Given the estimated death toll, Time magazine and others have called the sinking of Doña Paz "the deadliest peacetime maritime disaster of the 20th century".[3][20]

Sulpicio Lines announced three days after the accident that Doña Paz was insured for 25,000,000 (about US$550,000 in 2011 dollars), and it was willing to indemnify the survivors the amount of 20,000 (US$472 in 2011) for each victim.[21] Days later, hundreds of the victims' kin staged a mass rally at Rizal Park, demanding that the ship owners likewise indemnify the families of those not listed on the manifest, as well as to give a full accounting of the missing.[13]

According to the initial investigation conducted by the Philippine Coast Guard, only one apprentice member of the crew of Doña Paz was monitoring the bridge when the accident occurred.[22] Other officers were either drinking beer or watching television in the crew's recreation quarters,[23] while the ship's captain was watching a movie on his Betamax in his cabin.[24] Nonetheless, the Board of Marine Inquiry eventually cleared Sulpicio Lines of fault in the accident.[12] Subsequent inquiries revealed that Vector was operating without a license, lookout or properly qualified master.[9] In 1999, the Supreme Court of the Philippines ruled that it was the owners of Vector who were liable to indemnify the victims of the collision.[4][12] Some of the claims pursued against either Sulpicio Lines or the owners of Vector, such as those filed by the Cañezal family (who lost two members) and the Macasas family (who lost three members) were adjudicated by the Supreme Court, which found that even the families of victims who did not appear on the official manifest were entitled to indemnity.[4][12] Caltex Philippines, which had chartered Vector, was likewise cleared of financial liability.[4]

The National Geographic Channel premiered a documentary about Doña Paz entitled Asia's Titanic on August 25, 2009.[25][26]

See also

References

  1. R.B.Haworth (2006). "Search results for "5415822"". Miramar Ship Index. Wellington, New Zealand. Retrieved December 13, 2008.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Omar Acosta; Dave Veridiano & Marlen Ronquillo (December 23, 1987). "Doña Paz Overloaded; Inquiry Set". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  3. 1 2 3 Hooke, Norman. Maritime Casualties, 1963–1996. Lloyd’s of London Press, 1997
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Caltex Philippines v. Sulpicio Lines, 374 Phil. 325 (Supreme Court of the Philippines September 30, 1999).
  5. "MSNBC World News/Asia Pacific". Retrieved August 8, 2009.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Associated Press (December 21, 1987). "1,500 Are Feared Lost as Two Ships Collide and Sink Near Philippines". The New York Times. Retrieved December 13, 2008.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 "Tanker Rams Ferry, 1,500 Feared Dead". Philippine Daily Inquirer. December 22, 1987.
  8. John Lancaster, Engineering catastrophes: causes and effects of major accidents. Woodhead Publishing, 2005, 3rd. ed., p. 71.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Det Norske Veritas. "Annex 1: Passenger Vessel Evacuation Descriptions" (PDF). Retrieved December 13, 2008.
  10. 1 2 3 4 Sheila Coronel (December 22, 1987). "Searchers Find No Trace of 1,500 From 2 Ships Sunk in Philippines". The New York Times. Retrieved December 13, 2008.
  11. 1 2 Omar Acosta; Dave Veridiano & Gerry Lirio (December 24, 1987). "238 Bodies Washed Ashore in Mindoro". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  12. 1 2 3 4 Vector Shipping Corp. v. Macasa (Supreme Court of the Philippines July 21, 2008). Text
  13. 1 2 Associated Press (December 27, 1987). "Bodies of 133 Found From Ferry Disaster, The Filipinos Report". The New York Times. Retrieved December 14, 2008.
  14. "300 More Charred Victims Retrieved". Philippine Daily Inquirer. December 26, 1987.
  15. 1 2 Ed Perpena & Dave Veridiano (December 29, 1987). "2,000 On Ship Not On Manifest". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  16. "3,159 people were on 'Dona Paz'". Lloyd’s List. February 24, 1988.
  17. "Official 'Dona Paz' toll exceeds 4,300". Lloyd’s List. January 26, 1989.
  18. Barbara Crosette (December 23, 1987). "It's Gloom And Glitter For Manila". The New York Times. Retrieved December 24, 2008.
  19. Agence France Presse & Associated Press (December 24, 1987). "Pope, Takeshita Send Condolences". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  20. Howard Chua Eo & Nelly Sindayen (January 4, 1988). "The Philippines Off Mindoro, a Night to Remember". Time. Archived from the original on December 9, 2007. Retrieved December 13, 2008.
  21. Agence France Presse (December 23, 1987). "Sulpicio Willing to Pay Victims". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  22. "Coast Guard Says: Dona Paz Officers Not at Their Posts". Philippine Daily Inquirer. December 25, 1987.
  23. Associated Press (December 25, 1987). "Officers Were Not at Posts, Ship Disaster Survivor Says". The New York Times. Retrieved December 14, 2008.
  24. Dona Paz officers were not at posgs
  25. "Davao Titanic debuts today". Mindanao Times. August 25, 2009. Retrieved September 6, 2009.
  26. "Asia's Titanic". Archived from the original on August 20, 2009. Retrieved September 6, 2009.

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