Gulf Today

5 dead after boat flips in possible whale strike

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WELLINGTON: Five people died on Saturday in New Zealand ater the small charter boat they were aboard capsized, authoritie­s say, in what may have been a collision with a whale. Another six people aboard the boat were rescued.

Police said the 8.5-metre boat overturned near the South Island town of Kaikmura. Police said they were continuing to investigat­e the cause of the accident.

Kaikmura Police Sergeant Mat Boyce described it as a devastatin­g and unpreceden­ted event.

“Our thoughts are with everyone involved, including the victims and their families, their local communitie­s, and emergency services personnel,” Boyce said.

He said police divers had recovered the bodies of all those who had died. He said all six survivors were assessed to be in stable condition at a local health center, with one transferre­d to a hospital in the city of Christchur­ch as a precaution.

Kaikmura Mayor Craig Mackle told The Associated Press that the water was dead calm at the time of the accident and the assumption was that a whale had surfaced from beneath the boat.

He said there were some sperm whales in the area and also some humpback whales traveling through.

He said locals had helped with the rescue efforts throughout the day but the mood in the town was “somber” because the water was so cold and they feared for the outcome of anybody who had fallen overboard.

Mackle said he’d thought in the past about the possibilit­y of a boat and whale colliding, given the number of whales that frequent the region.

“It always plays on your mind that it could happen,” he said, adding that he hadn’t heard about any previous such accidents.

Mackle said the boat was a charter vessel typically used for fishing excursions. News agency Stuff reported the passengers belonged to a bird enthusiast­s’ group.

Police said they were still notifying the relatives of those who died, and couldn’t yet publicly name the victims.

Vanessa Chapman told Stuff she and a group of friends had watched the rescue efforts unfold from Goose Bay, near Kaikmura. She said that when she arrived at a lookout spot, she could see a person siting atop an overturned boat waving their arms.

She said two rescue helicopter­s and a third local helicopter were circling before two divers jumped out. She told Stuff that the person atop the boat was rescued and a second person appeared to have been pulled from the water.

Kaikmura is a popular whale-watching destinatio­n.

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