The night-walkers of Uganda
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- November 26, 2007
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2 Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. 1. How many people were on the ship in total? 2. How British people were on the ship? 3. How many hours did they spend in the life rafts? 4. How much did the holiday cost? 5. Where were most of the crew from? 6. Where is Punta Arenas? 253 Happy to be heading home: iceberg survivors tell of fear in darkness One of the last to leave the Antarctic cruise ship as it started listing believed they were all going to die. Karen McVeigh November 26, 2007 Last week a cruise ship called the Explorer hit an iceberg in the Antarctic and sank. All the passengers are safe now but they were very afraid when the accident happened. One of the survivors has talked about the terrifying hours the passengers spent in the darkness in a lifeboat in the freezing cold. They did not know if a rescue boat would come before they died from the cold. The wife of Bob Flood, 52, who worked on the ship, said that her husband thought they would all die. “When they were in the life raft, they didn’t know if a boat would come to rescue them,” Mandy Flood said. “He didn’t know how long it would be before he became ill from the cold. They didn’t have any information. He said that he thought they would die.” Last night, Mr Flood arrived in Punta Arenas, Chile, on an army plane, along with the other tourists and the crew from the ship. Eleven passengers and 66 staff had to stay on a military base in the Antarctic for two nights because of bad weather. Then they arrived in Chile and joined the 75 passengers and two staff members who arrived on Saturday night. The Explorer began to sink after the ship hit an iceberg just before midnight on Friday. The iceberg made a large hole in the side of the ship. All 154 holidaymakers and crew on board escaped on life rafts and then had to spend five hours in sub-zero temperatures before a Norwegian ship found them and took them to two military bases on King George Island. Passengers in the first group of survivors to arrive in Chile talked about their feelings when they got off the plane. “I feel wonderful, very pleased to be alive,” Danish tourist Jan Henkel, 42, said. “Everybody was afraid they would die.” When they reached Chile, Mr Henkel asked his girlfriend to marry him. “I’m so happy that everyone got off the ship, because it was nearly a terrible disaster,” said Eli Charne, 38, from California. Charne, who felt the ship hit the iceberg, said: “I thought the ship was sinking. We were on the lowest deck of the ship, so we all ran out of the room and pressed the emergency button as the water came in. It’s certainly nice to be on the way home now. I’m just really glad to be alive” he said. The Explorer is owned by a Canadian tour company, GAP Adventures. It was near the end of a 19-day, £4,000 trip when it hit the iceberg. A spokesman for GAP Adventures said that after they arrived in Punta Arenas in Chile, the passengers could join another cruise or fly home. When he was asked about an investigation into the accident, the spokesman said: “The investigation will begin when all the passengers are safe in Chile.” The passengers included 23 British, 17 Dutch, 14 Americans, 12 Canadians, 10 Australians, four Swiss, four Irish, three Danish, two Argentines, two Belgians, two from Hong Kong and single passengers from China, France, Germany, Japan, Colombia and Sweden. Most of the crew were from the Philippines, the company said. Mrs Flood, whose husband worked for GAP and gave lectures on the ship, said that Mr Flood was one of the last people to leave the ship as water lower decks filled with water. “It took an hour for everyone to get off and by then the ship was listing. He said that was Download 7.3 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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