Five dead as Greek ferry catches fire

A grab taken from a video made available by the Guardia costiera, Italy's coast guard organization on December 28, 2014, shows the burning ferry "Norman Atlantic" adrift off Albania. PHOTO | GUARDIA COSTIERA |

What you need to know:

  • Evacuation ends nearly 36 hours after fire broke out on the car deck and left the vessel drifting.

BARI, Italy, Monday

At least five people died after a car ferry caught fire in the Adriatic Sea, Greek and Italian officials said today, as survivors described a terrifying ordeal that could easily have been much more deadly.

Four bodies were recovered from the water around the stricken Norman Atlantic today, a day after the body of a 62-year-old Greek man was pulled from the heaving sea.

A 24-hour evacuation operation that proved to be extremely difficult was concluded shortly after midday with the Italian navy saying only a skeleton crew of nine men had been left on board to prepare for the boat being towed to port.

Wrapped in blankets and with many of them sporting bandages, 49 of the 478 passengers and crew who were on board the ferry when it caught fire shortly after dawn on Sunday disembarked from the merchant ship “Spirit of Pireus” at the Italian port of Bari. They and other evacuees told how the fire triggered panic which the crew appeared ill-prepared to deal with.

One of the first passengers off in Bari told reporters he had thought he was going to die as parts of the boat became engulfed by thick smoke as the ferry was travelling from Greece to Italy.

“We did not know what to do. The staff had no idea how to get people off the boat,” he said.

“The lifeboats did not work, there was only one of them in the water and none of the crew were there to help people.”

The evacuation was completed nearly 36 hours after a fire broke out on the car deck and left the huge vessel drifting dangerously in high seas off the coast of Albania.

With a second navy boat at the scene and able to provide a landing deck for helicopters, the pace of the evacuation accelerated significantly today.

With the evacuation complete, questions began to be asked about how the fire started and why it was not contained.

Bari prosecutor Giuseppe Volpe announced a criminal investigation which will seek to establish whether negligence contributed to the disaster.

The Italian owner of the boat, Carlo Visentini, said he would cooperate fully. He insisted that the vessel, which was leased to Greek operator ANEK ferries, had passed a technical inspection which included its firedoors on December 19.

The body of the Greek passenger who died on Sunday was recovered after he and his wife, Teodora Douli, 56, ended up in the water while trying to reach a lifeboat.