45 Canadians on stricken Azamara Quest cruise liner; ship arrives in Malaysia
A luxury cruise ship stranded at sea for 24 hours because of a fire safely reached a Malaysian port where policy and embassy officials stood by Sunday to help 1,000 people aboard, including 45 Canadians.
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| Azamara Club Cruises courtesy of Reuters | 
Two ambulances came out of the
 port shortly after the ship docked, followed more than two hours later 
around midnight by a fleet of buses taking passengers to hotels. Inside 
the buses, several people appeared tired, but many others smiled and one
 man waved to reporters waiting outside the port.
Consular officials from several countries, including Canada, Britain and the United States, were also present.
Canada's
 Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade said it is aware 
of reports that a cruise ship carrying Canadians experienced "technical 
difficulties" and continues to monitor the situation.
"To date, we have no reports of any injuries," a department spokesman said in an email.
Port
 officials stopped journalists from approaching the vessel because of 
what a Malaysian agent for the ship's operator said was part of the 
company's instructions.
It was the latest in a series of accidents
 hitting luxury cruise liners since January, when the Costa Concordia 
capsized off the coast of Italy, killing 32 people.
The fire on 
the Azamara Quest had been extinguished immediately, but five crew 
members suffered smoke inhalation, including one who was seriously 
injured and needed hospital care, the ship's operator has said.
The
 11-deck vessel, which features a casino, spa and shopping boutiques, 
was carrying 590 passengers and 411 crew members. Over one-third, or 
201, of the passengers were American, according to lists of passenger 
and crew nationalities provided by the ship captain to the Philippine 
Coast Guard.
The passengers from 25 countries also included 98 
from Britain, 89 from Australia, 39 from Germany, 32 from Austria, 16 
from Belgium, 14 from New Zealand and 14 from Switzerland.
Azamara Club Cruises, the ship's Miami, Florida-based operator, said 
in a statement earlier Sunday the ship was sailing at a top speed of 
only 11 kilometres per hour to reach Sandakan.
"Unfortunately, the
 ship has not been able to restore power to the air conditioning 
compressors," the statement said, adding that "the guest sentiment 
onboard continues to be calm and upbeat."
Company president Larry Pimentel is expected to meet with the passengers and crew in Sandakan by Monday.
Engineers
 on Saturday morning restored electricity in the ship to re-establish 
essentials including running water, plumbing, refrigeration and food 
preparation, the company said.
The company said the rest of the 
cruise would be cancelled. It said it would fully refund the passengers 
and provide each guest with a future cruise certificate for the amount 
paid for the aborted voyage. Azamara Club Cruises is part of Miami-based
 Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.
The crew includes 119 Filipinos, 58 
Indians and 50 Indonesians. The vessel left Hong Kong on Monday for what
 was supposed to be a 17-day Southeast Asian cruise. It made a port call
 in Manila and left for Sandakan on Thursday. It had been scheduled to 
make several stops in Indonesia before arriving in Singapore on April 
12.
Instead, it drifted Saturday in the Sulu Sea about 130 
kilometres south of the Philippines' Tubbataha Reef, Philippine Coast 
Guard spokesman Lt.-Cmdr. Algier Ricafrente said. The area lies between 
the Philippines and the island of Borneo, which is divided between 
Malaysia and Indonesia.
Ricafrente said no distress call was received and there would be an investigation.
The
 ship's senior physician, Oliver Gilles, said the seriously injured crew
 member had suffered "prolonged heat and smoke exposure."
A month 
after 32 people died when the Costa Concordia ran aground and capsized 
off the western coast of Italy in January, a fire on the Costa Allegra 
left that ship without power and adrift in waters known to be prowled by
 pirates in the Indian Ocean for three days.
News story courtesy of:
Eileen Ng, The Associated Press
and
The Canadian Press
Related News:
Drama comes to an end for 54 Canadians on Azamara Cruise Ship adrift in Philippine Waters
News story courtesy of Natalie Stechyson of Post Media News, montrealgazette.com
Photo courtesy of Bazuki Muhammad of Reuters


hm, I did cruise trip with Azamara, very nice Cruise club. And surprise to see this update. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI still want to go on a cruise inspite of all the news about cruising. There are more good news than bad anyways. I will visit you to check on good deals. Thanks for your comment.
DeleteAll these travel horror stories are terrifying!
ReplyDeleteIt is terrifying! But when I go for a trip, I don't even think of the horrors that can happen because it can only ruin all my excitement.
DeleteThanks Dan for your comment.