Indonesia calls off operation to retrieve ferry victims
Indonesia said on Monday it was calling off a two-week operation to retrieve the bodies of nearly 200 passengers thought to have drowned in one of the world’s deepest volcanic lakes. The overcrowded wooden ferry capsized during a storm on June 18 in Lake Toba, which is around 1,500 feet deep, as travellers were heading home after Eid holidays. Eighteen passengers survived, three were confirmed dead and nearly 200 are missing.
The operation to find the ferry and retrieve the victims has faced numerous technical and logistical hurdles in a lake that has never been completely surveyed. Video footage taken last week using a remotely operated underwater vehicle showed human remains, motorcycles and ropes from the ferry at a depth of 450 metres. Rescue spokesman Muhammad Yusuf Latif confirmed that the search operation would end. “We’ve already had face-to-face discussions with the families of the victims [on] the difficulties faced in the field [and] reasons why we won’t continue; why we want to end it,” Latif said by telephone. “They understand why we’re stopping.”
According to Muhammad Ilyas, head of the Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology, the wreckage was found on Saturday, but the remotely operated underwater vehicle used to find it had also become stuck in ropes connected to the ferry. “We have proven 100 per cent” that the ferry is there, Ilyas said, adding that the submersible was later retrieved but needed to be repaired as its cable had broken. Craig Chesner, a geologist from Eastern Illinois University who conducted a survey of Toba in 2012, said the ferry had sunk “in the deepest part of the entire lake”. According to media reports, a monument will be erected by the government in memory of the victims.
Published in Dawn, July 3rd, 2018