2014-12-29 13:26
Bari - A cargo ship with 49 people evacuated from a Greek ferry that
caught fire in the Adriatic Sea arrived in the Italian port of Bari on
Monday, the first big group to reach land.
More than 160 people remained trapped on the smoke-filled vessel adrift in rough seas between Italy and Albania.
One
person was killed in the risky rescue operation and two others were
injured as Italian and Greek rescue ships and helicopters plucked
passengers off the stricken vessel and brought them to safety aboard the
10 or so mercantile ships nearby.
Those evacuees were to be brought to shore later after the rescue was completed, Greek officials said.
One
of the cargo ships, the Spirit of Piraeus, docked in Bari just after
07:30 on Monday with 49 survivors aboard. The first to disembark was an
injured man wrapped in a yellow striped blanket and wearing bandages
around his bare feet, helped down the ship's ladder by two rescue
workers.
Other evacuees, many wrapped in blankets, made their way
slowly down the ladder with assistance, some thrusting their hands in a
victory sign as they waited their turn. Among them were four children.
TV crews and relatives gathered on the docks below in near silence.
The evacuees then boarded bright red fire department buses. Officials have said hotels have been booked for them around town.
The
ship came ashore in Bari after first trying to dock overnight down the
coast in Brindisi. Rough seas forced a change in plans.
Struggling to breathe
The
fire broke out before dawn Sunday on a car deck of the Italian-flagged
Norman Atlantic, carrying 422 passengers and 56 crew members. All day
and night, passengers huddled on the vessel's upper decks, pelted by
rain and hail and struggling to breathe through the thick smoke.
By
early Monday, 316 people had been evacuated, leaving 161 more on board,
Greek Merchant Marine Minister Miltiadis Varvitsiotis said.
Helicopters rescued passengers throughout the night, completing 34 sorties with winds over 75km/h.
"Notwithstanding
the weather and the darkness, which is another factor, we persisted
throughout the entire night," Italian coast guard Admiral Giovanni
Pettorino told Sky TG24.
Those remaining on board were given
thermal blankets and found places to wait protected from the elements
"even if the conditions remain very difficult," Pettorino said.
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