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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Senegal ferry disaster kills close to a thousand passengers
By Barbara Slaughter
2 October 2002
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The Senegalese ferry Joola capsized in a storm off the
coast of Gambia on the night of September 26. Out of the 1,034
passengers and crew on board, only 64 people have been rescued
and approximately 400 bodiesmany of them childrenhave
been recovered. It is the countrys worst maritime disaster
and ranks as one of the worlds worst ferry accidents of
all time.

When the disaster occurred the boat was carrying nearly double
its official capacity of 550 passengers. It left the port of Ziguinchor,
in the south of Senegal bound for the capital Dakar. Two hundred
passengers and crew boarded the ferry at a second stop.
The passengers were mostly Senegalese. Some were traders taking
dried fish, mangoes and palm oil to sell in Dakar. Others were
students and schoolchildren, returning from the south to begin
the new academic year. There were also passengers from neighbouring
Guinea-Bissau and Gambia on board, as well as French and Spanish
tourists.
According to survivors the boat overturned in heavy seas in
a matter of minutes, leaving most of the passengers trapped inside.
Survivors described the horror of clinging to the keel of the
upturned boat and hearing the screams of passengers below them.
Hours later the survivors were picked up by Senegalese fishermen,
who risked their lives in dangerous seas to carry out the rescue.
France, the former colonial power, lent a rescue plane, helicopter
and boats for the recovery of bodies.
After hearing of the disaster many desperate relatives and
friends headed for the port in Dakar in the early hours of the
next morning to await news. Military police were called in to
control them. Others waited at the hospitals for the posting of
the lists of names of survivors.
Angry protesters, relatives and friends of those on the ferry
gathered outside the residence of Senegals President Abdoulaye
Wade and demanded to know who was responsible for the disaster.
In an attempt to defuse the anger of the crowd, Wade said the
state would take responsibility and would compensate victims
families. He said that there had been an accumulation of
errors, adding that the ferry was too high in the
water, too slow. He admitted that the Joola, which
is flat-bottomed, was a boat designed for lakes and
totally unsuitable for sea use. He called for three days of official
mourning and promised an inquiry into the disaster.
The ship had suffered damage to one of its engines as a result
of a storm on a previous sailing, but was not taken out of commission.
The non-government paper Le Sud Quotidien ran a front-page
story under the banner, This ship should never have taken
to the water. The Walfadjri newspaper accused the
government of criminal populism for letting the ferry
be put back into service following extensive repairs.
According to Reuters, witnesses have stated that the boat was
listing heavily to one side on its departure from the harbour
at Ziguinchor. A report in This Day (Lagos) spoke of unconfirmed
reports of engine failure on an earlier trip and also cited rumours
of the boat being overloaded with merchandise as well as passengers.
The ferry is state owned and run by the Senegalese army. The
route is a widely used by people travelling between the main region
of Senegal and the southern province of Casamance. Since independence
in 1960 there has been civil unrest in the south, with the separatist
Movement of Democratic Forces of Casamance (MDFC) pushing for
independence. President Wade signed a peace deal with the MDFC
last year, but splits within the separatist movement have made
this ineffective.
The activities of the MDFC make travel overland between the
two parts of Senegal hazardous. This is compounded by the division
of much of Casamance from northern Senegal by the relatively tiny
strip of land that constitutes Gambia, a former British colony.
Overland travellers have to pass across its border and through
its customs posts, making the ferry trip the favoured option.
The sinking of the Joola is a stark manifestation of
the deterioration of the Senegalese economy and infrastructure.
In July 2000 Senegal was designated as one of the worlds
least developed countries. It is 160th out of 175 in the league
table of human development of the United Nations Development Programme.
The International Monetary Fund imposed a structural adjustment
programme at the end of the 1980s, which was followed by an austerity
programme and the devaluation of the currency in 1994. Debt servicing
takes a massive 14.4 percent of GNP and although foreign aid has
tripled over the past 15 years, two thirds of it goes in debt
repayments.
President Wades admission of state responsibility for
the sinking of the Joola will in all probability result
in some individual state official being scapegoated. But Wade
and his predecessor, who have supported the implementation of
IMF policies, are responsible together with the western powers
for the catastrophic situation in the country that resulted in
this disaster.
See Also:
West Africa
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