Mumbai ferry – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 21 Dec 2024 07:33:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png Mumbai ferry – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Mumbai Ferry Accident Death Count At 15 After Body Of Missing Boy, 7, Found https://artifex.news/mumbai-ferry-accident-death-count-at-15-after-body-of-missing-boy-7-found-7299875rand29/ Sat, 21 Dec 2024 07:33:02 +0000 https://artifex.news/mumbai-ferry-accident-death-count-at-15-after-body-of-missing-boy-7-found-7299875rand29/ Read More “Mumbai Ferry Accident Death Count At 15 After Body Of Missing Boy, 7, Found” »

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The Navy has launched a probe into one of the deadliest crashes in the city’s harbour area. (File)

Mumbai:

The body of a seven-year-old boy missing in the ferry-Navy craft crash off the Mumbai coast was recovered on Saturday morning after a three-day-long search operation, an official said.

Naval boats have found the body of Johan Mohammad Nisar Ahmed Pathan, taking the death count in the December 18 tragedy to 15.

The Navy has launched a probe into one of the deadliest crashes in the city’s harbour area.

A naval helicopter and boats of the Navy and Coast Guard were deployed to look for the missing passengers as part of the SAR operation, the official said.

Of the 113 persons on board both the vessels, 15 have died and 98, including two injured, were rescued.

There were six persons on board the Navy craft, of which two survived, the official said.

The tragedy struck when the speeding Navy craft undergoing engine trials lost control and collided with a passenger ferry, ‘Neel Kamal’, off the Mumbai coast.

The ferry, with more than 100 passengers, was on its way from the Gateway of India to the Elephanta Island, a popular tourist attraction which has a collection of ancient caves.

According to the documents issued by the Maharashtra Maritime Board (MMB), the boat had permission to carry 84 passengers and six crew members, but it was overloaded, a police official said.

The MMB, which is conducting an investigation into the accident, has cancelled the licence of the ferry as the vessel was overloaded, thus violating the Inland Vessel Act. The ferry had a capacity of 90 persons, an official said.

A case has been registered against the Navy craft driver at the Colaba police station, the official said.

Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) sections invoked in the FIR included those related to causing death by negligence, actions that endanger the personal safety or life of others, rash or negligent navigation of a vessel and acts of mischief that cause wrongful loss or damage to individuals or the public.

The accident-affected craft is in the custody of the Navy, and police will demand it whenever needed for investigation, the official said.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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Parents On Mumbai Ferry Planned To Throw Their Kids In Water: CISF Rescuers https://artifex.news/parents-on-mumbai-ferry-planned-to-throw-their-kids-in-water-cisf-rescuers-7296161rand29/ Fri, 20 Dec 2024 16:15:01 +0000 https://artifex.news/parents-on-mumbai-ferry-planned-to-throw-their-kids-in-water-cisf-rescuers-7296161rand29/ Read More “Parents On Mumbai Ferry Planned To Throw Their Kids In Water: CISF Rescuers” »

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CISF constable Amol Savant and his two colleagues became “first responders” after the accident. (File)

New Delhi:

The panic-stricken parents onboard an ill-fated tourist ferry were thinking of tossing their children into the sea water as a desperate measure after their boat started sinking off Mumbai, but a team of CISF marine commandos stopped them with an assurance that everyone will be saved.

CISF constable Amol Savant (36) and his two colleagues became the “first responders” after the December 18 accident. Their patrol boat reached the accident site off the Mumbai coast around 4 pm, and they decided to utilise the “golden hour” for first saving the most vulnerable, including the children.

Fourteen people were killed after a Navy boat rammed into the tourist ferry — ‘Neel Kamal’ — on way to the Elephanta Island from the Gateway of India in Mumbai late Wednesday afternoon.

“We were on routine patrol at some distance off the shore when our walkie talkie crackled to inform us that a passenger ferry was sinking. I asked the pilot (speed boat driver) to go full throttle and we reached the accident site about 3-4 kms away in no time,” Savant told PTI here.

He said he was “astonished to see the accident site. But being a trained soldier, I understood what was to be done and how.” “We saw people were ready to throw their children in the ocean water thinking that they would be saved from the sinking ship. I asked them not to panic and not attempt this. We took charge of the situation soon,” said the jawan, who is posted with the CISF unit that guards the Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT), Navi Mumbai.

Savant said he too was “shaken initially when he reached the site but then when I saw the children hanging dangerously from whatever was left of the sinking ferry and their helpless parents, I and my colleagues just caught hold of the children and brought them in our boat.” The jawan says they rescued about 6-7 children in the first go followed by women and men.

“There were many hands raised towards us, some screaming, some just requesting to save them. We don’t know how many exactly but we were able to help and rescue as many as 50-60 people who were onboard that ill-fated ferry,” Savant, who joined the CISF in 2010, said.

Sub Inspector (SI) Kheioka Sema (38), posted with the CISF unit that provides counterterrorist security cover to the JNPA, was in the second patrol boat that reached the spot.

“I saw a lady who was in the water wearing a life jacket but she had raised her hands in anticipation that she would be rescued. We rushed to her and gently asked her to put her hands down else the jacket would slip and she would start drowning,” Sema said.

She was saved, he said.

SI Sema, who joined the paramilitary force in 2018, said they administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to maybe 10-12 persons to bring them back to senses and drain out the water they had swallowed.

The two CISF personnel, who had come to Delhi for official work, said a foreigner couple onboard the ferry acted as ‘Good Samaritans’ as they came forward for help and administered CPR to a number of victims.

“We fanned out to scan about a 300-metre radius looking for life. Our teams also picked up bags, life jackets and other stuff from the ocean water the passengers of ‘Neel Kamal’ were carrying,” Sema said.

The two personnel and their other colleagues have been trained in marine operations, commando tactics and amphibious survival and combat techniques.

“Our personnel who are posted to guard sea ports are essentially trained in marine commando operations, combat and survival techniques. They provide an armed security cover to such facilities against any sabotage or terrorist threat,” CISF chief spokesperson and Deputy Inspector General (DIG) Deepak Verma said.

“These men and women are also taken to the Chilika lake in Odisha as part of a special marine training capsule. We are proud of these personnel who were part of the rescue operation in Mumbai,” he said.

The force, as per officials, will recommend the names of the personnel who were involved in this rescue operation for the ‘Jeevan Raksha Padak’ (or the life saving medal) apart from granting them the highest recognition in their service records.

“The accident site was way beyond the area of responsibility of our two security units deployed at the Jawaharlal Nehru Port Authority (JNPA) and the Mumbai Port Trust but the personnel displayed fine professionalism and devotion to duty by being the first responders to the tragedy and saving numerous lives,” a senior CISF officer said.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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Passengers Panic, Scream For Help As Ferry Sinks Off Mumbai Coast https://artifex.news/video-passengers-panic-scream-for-help-as-ferry-sinks-near-mumbai-7280747rand29/ Wed, 18 Dec 2024 18:42:10 +0000 https://artifex.news/video-passengers-panic-scream-for-help-as-ferry-sinks-near-mumbai-7280747rand29/ Read More “Passengers Panic, Scream For Help As Ferry Sinks Off Mumbai Coast” »

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The navy craft whose engine was on a trial run lost control and collided with the passenger ferry

New Delhi:

A video of Indian Navy and Coast Guard personnel rescuing passengers of a ferry that sank near Mumbai after colliding with a naval speedboat shows people shouting for help as the boat slowly goes under water.

Thirteen people were killed and 99 were rescued. The navy craft whose engine was on a trial run lost control and collided with the passenger ferry that was going from the Gateway of India to Elephanta Island, a tourist spot.

“Search and Rescue efforts were immediately launched by the Navy in coordination with the Coast Guard and Marine Police. Four naval helicopters, 11 naval craft, one Coast Guard boat and three Marine Police boats were involved in the rescue efforts,” the Navy said.

“The survivors picked up by Navy and civil craft in the area have been transferred to jetties and hospitals in the vicinity. So far 99 survivors have been rescued,” it added.

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis told reporters in Nagpur that 101 persons have been rescued. He said he was deeply saddened by the loss of precious lives in the collision between the passenger ferry and the Indian Navy craft.

Mr Fadnavis declared financial assistance of Rs 5 lakh to the families of those who died in the accident.



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