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I was doing some reading today. The Red Sea has a huge number of registered liveaboards. I tried to read about liveaboard accidents but the information is difficult to find. I found 9 Red Sea accidents, fire, ran aground, capsized. I was hoping to find a database on liveaboard accidents around the world, but found nothing.
What time frame did those accidents cover?
Hi @azstinger11I believe it was from 2014 on, maybe one earlier
@Dan
But there should be an access to the cabins from the bow of the ship. The fire was in the stern of the ship.
Having, if not worked in Egypt, been for work in Egypt numerous times, I'm afraid such an easy, straightforward, arrangement like this would be detailed within days. The tech checking would be forced to bring a bunch of "officials" with him - and the boat would not be approved without money changing hands. Not "bribe amount", but the typical Baksheesh is expected, and I've honestly been afraid when people I've disembarked with have refused to pay such money.The marginal cost to add a handful of very loud alarm bells and trigger buttons in key locations in the cost of a new boat build would be utterly trivial. It doesn't even have to meet any particular code, it just has to make noise to save a lot of lives. Dive guides running down to alert passengers simply should not ever have to happen - the moment anyone sees smoke they should be no more than 10 seconds away from a button that makes a very loud 'wake up and get out now' sound in every compartment of the boat.
There's plenty of other low-cost/no-cost actions that could vastly improve the odds of survival for everyone on board.
Given the cost of labour in Egypt even adding a nominal fee for someone knowledgable and skilled to do a detailed safety inspection and a bit of safety system related maintenance of EVERY boat EVERY time it hits port would be trivial - 20EUR per passenger. Smoke alarm checks; compressor air quality checks; safety provision inventory, etc. Imagine how few issues there would be if things were getting checked by an independent set of eyes every single week. Create some jobs, save some lives, increase tourist dollar inflows by running a respectable industry. No doubt CDWS is reading this. Get on it.
The only real solution to this is boat owners - not captains, not engineers, not crew, not managers, not booking agencies - but boat *owners* being criminally liable for the happenings on their property and going to jail for manslaughter when their poor cost-saving decisions kill passengers or staff. Some boat designers need to be held to account as well - the 'Egyptian way' of building boats has a lot of flaws.
Right now I think long and hard before even considering a booking that doesn't give me direct exterior access from my cabin. I've been on the edge about returning to Egypt (after 3 previous trips) but I think I'm about to cross it off permanently on a risk/reward basis.
That's certainly a bigger issue Egypt needs to fix.Having, if not worked in Egypt, been for work in Egypt numerous times, I'm afraid such an easy, straightforward, arrangement like this would be detailed within days. The tech checking would be forced to bring a bunch of "officials" with him - and the boat would not be approved without money changing hands. Not "bribe amount", but the typical Baksheesh is expected, and I've honestly been afraid when people I've disembarked with have refused to pay such money.
And how is this supposed to happen?Some boat designers need to be held to account as well - the 'Egyptian way' of building boats has a lot of flaws.
Why would they read posts on Scubaboard?No doubt CDWS is reading this. Get on it.
And how is this supposed to happen?
In Egypt and many other poor countries, the people have many bigger problems than boat design to please western tourists.
Many egyptians (including the ones that work on dive boats) have hardly any access to education, health care and many other things most Canadians or Europeans think of as 'normal'. I reckon, what you're asking for isn't very high on their list of problems that need fixing... nor should it be.
When you're traveling to a poor country, odd are, it's less safe than in what you're used to. It is what it is.
Why would they read posts on Scubaboard?
I'm just wondering but have you been to Egypt before?That's certainly a bigger issue Egypt needs to fix.
But, honestly, with 350-500EUR collected per trip - I'm sure they could find a way to spread that around and still have a reasonably competent guy spend a few hours on the boat actually checking/fixing things.
They seem to have managed to wrangle nearly everyone into line with regards to tank maintenance (logging, hydro, etc.) and a few other dive related regulations - so it is possible to get things done there.