Over 100 drown after ferry sinks off Tanzania

STONE TOWN, Zanzibar, (Reuters) – At least 107  people drowned when a ferry capsized in rough waters off east  Africa as it sailed from Zanzibar to Pemba island, a doctor said  today, the worst disaster in the archipelago’s recent  history.
Witnesses fear the death toll could rise sharply since the  vessel was carrying well over 500 passengers and only 260  survivors have been found so far by fishing boats and tour  operators scouring the sea since the early hours.
“We are still receiving many bodies by truck loads … The  death toll will likely be much higher,” doctor Karim Zah of the  Mnazi Mmoja Hospital in Zanzibar told Reuters.
Dozens of soldiers carrying bodies onto shore dotted the  white sand beaches at the northern tip of Zanzibar island where  thousands of people anxiously awaited news of survivors.
A stream of military trucks brought in bodies to the Maisara  football grounds in Stone Town, where tens of thousands of  people gathered to identify the dead.
Emergency workers covered bodies in dark blankets and placed  the victims’ clothes on top so relatives could identify them.
At the popular tourist destination of Nungwi,  fishing boats and diving vessels ferried survivors ashore, a  dozen or fewer at a time, and crowds waded waist deep in the  water as the boats approached shore, desperately searching for  relatives.
Zanzibar, also know as Unguja, and Pemba are the two main  islands of the Zanzibar archipelago, a popular destination for  tourists visiting their pristine Indian Ocean beaches.
Zanzibar is a semi-autonomous region of the east African  country of Tanzania.
“The ship’s manifest shows that the vessel travelling from  Unguja to Pemba islands had more than 500 passengers on board,”  said Zanzibar Police Commissioner Mussa Alli Mussa told Reuters.
“Some 260 passengers have so far been rescued … we have  recovered several bodies but I can’t give you the exact death  toll at the moment because the situation is very volatile,” he  told Reuters.
Tour operators and local diving instructors spent the night  at sea searching for survivors.

“FEARING THE WORSE”
“Many of us got here about 2.30 a.m. (2330 GMT) this  morning,” said Suleiman Amis, 32, who works on a local diving  tour boat. “We sent out some boats to search for the survivors,  but we did not find them until very, very late.”
“We have friends who we know took that boat and we want to  go back out to find them as soon as possible,” he told Reuters.
Pemba is about 40 km (25 miles) from Zanzibar. Passengers  who regularly take ferries between the two islands said the  vessels are in a poor state of repair and are often overcrowded  and loaded with cargo.
Abdual Said, registrar of Zanzibar’s seafaring vessels, told  Reuters the capsized ferry, MV Spice, was licensed to carry 600  passengers.
“They normally pack us in like sardines in a can. And for  that I really fear this could be a very big disaster,” said  resident Mwnakhamis Juma.
The government in Zanzibar said last month it planned to  invest in bigger, more reliable vessels to ferry passengers  between the two islands. Zanzibar’s cabinet was meeting on  Saturday in response to the disaster.
“We are fearing the greatest calamity in the history of  Zanzibar. This is a disaster,” said a government official, who  declined to be named.