Cruise liner ‘ignored stricken ship’

If it did, the company said, the captain and crew would have altered course to
rescue the men, just as the cruise line has done more than 30 times in the
last 10 years. The company expressed sympathy for the men and their
families.

On Feb 24, the three men set out for a day of fishing from Rio Hato, the site
of a former U.S. Army base guarding the Panama Canal on the Pacific Coast.
They were on their way back, happy with their catch, when the motor died.

Vasquez recalled seeing the ship – “It was big. It was white.”
– on the morning of March 10.

Vasquez remembered jumping up and waving the sweater. He raised it over his
head, dropped it down to his knees, over and over and over. Though near
death, Elvis Oropeza Betancourt, 31, joined in, waving an orange life
jacket.

“‘Tio, look what’s coming over there,'” Vasquez recalled saying.

“We felt happy, because we thought they were coming to rescue us,”
he said.

Birdwatcher Jeff Gilligan from Portland, Ore., was the first to spot the boat,
something white that looked like a house.

When Judy Meredith of Bend, Ore., looked through her scope, she could plainly
see it was a small open boat, like the kinds they had seen off Ecuador. And
she could see a man waving what looked like a dark red T-shirt.

“You don’t wave a shirt like that just to be friendly,” Meredith
said. “He was desperate to get our attention.”

Barred from going to the bridge herself to notify the ship’s officers,
Meredith said she told a Princess Cruises representative what they had seen,
and he assured her he passed the news on to crew.

The birdwatchers said they even put the representative on one of the spotting
scopes so he could see for himself.

Meredith went to her cabin and noted their coordinates from a TV feed from the
ship, booted up her laptop and emailed the U.S. Coast Guard what she had
seen. She said she hoped someone would get the message and help.

She sent a copy to her son. When she returned to the promenade deck, she could
still see the boat.

But nothing happened. The ship kept going. And the little boat with the waving
men disappeared.

“We were kind of freaking out, thinking we don’t see anything else
happening,” Meredith said.

Gilligan could no longer bear to watch.

“It was very disturbing,” he said. “We asked other people,
‘What do you think we should do?’ Their reaction was: ‘Well, you’ve done
what you could do.’ Whether something else could have been done, that’s a
bit frustrating to think about.”

Oropeza along with Fernando Osario died. Vasquez was picked up by a fishing
boat off Ecuador’s Galapagos Islands, more than 600 miles from where they
had set out.

Vasquez said he slipped their bodies into the sea after they began to rot in
the heat. Before he was rescued, two rainstorms gave him fresh water to
drink, and he jumped in the water to retrieve floating coconuts.

Vasquez said he thought about his eight brothers a lot, and never lost hope,
but now prefers not to think about those 28 days adrift.

Vasquez said he recognised their boat, the Fifty Cents, from the photos
Gilligan had taken with his 300mm lens.

“Yes, that’s it. That’s it. That is us,” he said. “You can see
there, the red sweater I’m waving and, above it, is the sheet that we put up
to protect us from the sun.”

Vasquez mentioned the ship in his first statement to Panamanian authorities
when he returned to his country.

Back at home in Oregon, Meredith couldn’t sleep, wondering what happened to
the men. Reading a news story about a Panamanian rescued off Ecuador in an
open boat, she figured that was the boat they had seen.

The company said in an email the investigation was continuing.

Gilligan said he has had trouble coming up with an explanation for what
happened.

“My only theory is the ship’s staff have seen a lot of fishing boats,”
he said. “And they were on a tight schedule and they let the schedule
cloud their judgment.”

Source: AP

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