MV St. Thomas Aquinas
MV St. Thomas Aquinas was a Philippine-registered passenger ferry operated by 2GO Travel. On 16 August 2013, the vessel collided with a cargo ship named MV Sulpicio Express Siete of Philippine Span Asia Carrier Corporation and sank. As of 3 September 2013, there were 108 dead and 29 missing with 733 rescued as a result of the accident. The ship now rests at the bottom of the Mactan Channel.
Service history
M/V St. Thomas Aquinas started life as the Ferry Sumiyoshi of Meimon Car Ferry in Japan. She was built in the Onomichi yard of Onomichi Zosen. Ferry SumiyoshiIn April of 1992, she came to the Philippines to become the M/V Aboitiz SuperFerry 2 of Aboitiz Shipping Corporation. She was converted into a 4-deck multi-day passenger liner, increasing her passenger capacity to 2,643 passengers. A passenger gangplank was added together with a stern cargo ramp on her port side. Her full bridge deck and vehicle ramps at the bow and at the stern were later unused. She originally served the Manila-Cebu-Cagayan de Oro route.
In 2007, she was converted from a 4-deck liner to just 2. The passenger capacity of M/V SuperFerry 2 dropped to only 904. The ship moreover became an all-air-conditioned ship.
Later on, with the buy-out of Aboitiz Transport System by Negros Navigation in 2012, she passed on to the newly-merged company 2GO. She was renamed as the M/V St. Thomas Aquinas, named after the Catholic Saint Thomas Aquinas.
She and her sister-ship M/V St. Joan of Arc were around 40 years old at the time of the sinking, making her one of the longest-serving Philippine-based passenger ships.
Sinking
Collision
On Friday, 16 August 2013, St. Thomas Aquinas departed from Nasipit, Agusan del Norte, on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao. At approximately 21:00 PHT, it was heading into the port at Cebu City via the Cebu Strait when it collided with the MV Sulpicio Express Siete, a cargo ship owned by the Philippine Span Asia Carrier Corporation that was leaving port, approximately from Talisay, Cebu.St. Thomas Aquinas immediately began to take on water, prompting the captain to order an "Abandon Ship" announcement. The crew hurriedly handed out life jackets as hundreds of passengers jumped overboard. Within 30 minutes, the ship sank.
At the time of the collision, St. Thomas Aquinas was carrying 715 passengers and 116 crew members. Many passengers were asleep at the time or otherwise had trouble finding their way to the deck in the dark. A spokesperson for 2Go said there was a high probability that some passengers were in the area of impact and were trapped by the damage. The Sulpicio Express Siete, which did not sink, had 36 crew members on board and was severely damaged at the bow in the accident.
Local fishermen saw several flares–a sign of distress–being launched from St. Thomas Aquinas and helped with initial rescue efforts. "We just picked up the survivors and left the dead in the water," said a rescuer. "I heard screams and crying." The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council conducted rescue efforts. Rescued passengers were taken to local hotels.
Casualties
On Saturday, 17 August 2013, divers began the process of recovering bodies from the ship, which lay in 30 metres of water, but suspended operations later in the day due to safety concerns. 31 people were confirmed dead with 172 others missing as of midday, when rescue operations were suspended due to rough seas.By 18 August, there were 35 confirmed deaths and 85 others missing as a result of the accident. On 19 August, the Coast Guard confirmed 55 dead and 65 missing with 750 rescued. Rescue and recovery efforts were hampered by bad weather.
Many of the survivors were sickened after swallowing seawater and oil believed to have leaked from St. Thomas Aquinas.
Cause
In a statement, 2Go said St. Thomas Aquinas "was reportedly hit" by Sulpicio Line's cargo vessel, but at the same time refused to directly blame the cargo vessel. 2Go said the Port of Cebu is unusually narrow and that special traffic control measures were in use to try to avoid accidents at the port.Maritime accidents in the Philippines are common due to a combination of bad weather, poor maintenance, and lax enforcement of safety regulations. The Philippine Span Asia Carrier Corporation has been involved in five maritime disasters, most notably the 1987 sinking of the ferry Doña Paz that resulted in an estimated 4,000+ deaths.