Remembering the victims of 'Asia's Titanic' - the Doña Paz tragedy

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20 December 2017
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sailors-48681.jpg Sailors’ Society port chaplains Rev Jasper del Rosario and Rev Nic Tuban lay a wreath for the lost
Chaplains from international maritime charity Sailors’ Society marked the 30th anniversary of the worst peacetime maritime disaster with a wreath laying in the Philippines.

Chaplains from international maritime charity Sailors’ Society marked the 30thanniversary of the worst peacetime maritime disaster with a wreath laying in the Philippines.

Known as 'Asia’s Titanic' disaster, the Doña Paz was making its twice-weekly journey from Leyte island to the Filipino capital Manila, when it collided with the oil tanker MT Vector on 20 December 1987. 
 
 
The Vector was transporting thousands of barrels of petroleum and the collision caused its cargo to catch fire, which rapidly spread to the passenger ferry. Doña Paz could officially hold 1,518 passengers, manned by a 66-strong crew. However, thousands more people, not listed on the ship’s register, were on board. An estimated 4,386 perished that night.
 
Survivor testimony
 
One of only 24 passengers who survived, Paquito Osabel, reportedly said at the time: “I went to a window to see what happened, and I saw the sea in flames. I shouted to my companions to get ready, there is fire. The fire spread rapidly and there were flames everywhere.”
 
Paquito was sailing to Manila with his sister and three nieces. Like many on board, they were travelling home to spend Christmas with family.
 
Sailors’ Society’s port chaplain in Manila, Rev Nic Tuban, who laid the wreath with his colleague Rev Jasper del Rosario, remembers the tragedy well. “People in Manila were excited to celebrate Christmas but instead mourned. They waited at the city’s North Harbour, hoping that their loved ones were still alive. So many never saw their loved ones again.”
 
In March this year, families of the lost were given compensation.
 
Sailors’ Society’s CEO Stuart Rivers said: “Trauma can affect people for many years after a disaster. Earlier this year, Sailors’ Society launched a Crisis Response Network in Asia – a team of trained responders who are on-hand to support people traumatised by crisis at sea."
 
Sailors' Society website.
 
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