‘Zanzibar ferry was seaworthy’

Paramedics arrange the recovered bodies of victims of a ferry tragedy in the Indian Ocean waters, at the port of Zanzibar.

Paramedics arrange the recovered bodies of victims of a ferry tragedy in the Indian Ocean waters, at the port of Zanzibar.

Published Jul 20, 2012

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Ottawa - A Canadian company said on Thursday it brokered the sale of the ferry that sank off the Indian Ocean island of Zanzibar killing at least 62 people - and that the ship was seaworthy at the time of sale.

“Scope Community Consultants Ltd was asked to coordinate the purchase of two sister ferries from Washington State Ferries and shipping them from Seattle to Zanzibar last year,” Scope representative Peter Shayo wrote in an email to AFP.

“At the time they were purchased, they met all the US Coast Guard requirements for operating, and they were also properly inspected prior to shipping out,” Shayo added.

The Scope representative referred any further questions to Seagull Sea Transport Company, which operated the ferry out of Tanzania.

The Washington State Department of Transportation had said it sold two vessels to Scope.

More than 80 people are still missing and presumed dead after the ferry sank Wednesday in choppy waters off Zanzibar, after leaving Tanzania's commercial capital Dar es Salaam. So far, 62 bodies have been recovered.

The vessel officially carried 291 passengers and crew, including more than 30 children. But ferries in the region very often carry additional passengers who are not listed on the manifest.

The boat that sank Wednesday had initially been reported by officials to be the Kalama, but officials said Thursday it was in fact its sister ship, the Skagit. Both were built in 1989. - Sapa-AFP

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