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Toll Rises In Bahrain Boat Disaster

ISSUE 219
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This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

A Showdown Between The Parliament And ‎The President Over The Amina-Weris Case‎

6 Terrorist Suspects Recaptured following Jail Break‎    

Meet Me In Baidoa‎‎‎‎‎‎

Somaliland Forum Slams Yemeni Times Biased ‎Coverage‎

Somaliland Supreme Court Acquits ONLF ‎Rebels‎‎

Ethiopian Pastoralists Benefit From Export Of ‎Livestock To Somaliland‎

Will The Arabs Dare To Listen To Somaliland?‎‎‎

Regional Affairs

The Arms Embargo On Somalia’s TFG Must Not Be ‎Lifted By The UN

EU Backs Abdillahi Yusuf’s Leadership, Pledges More Aid‎

Ethiopia Signs Agreement With U.S. Firm On Oil ‎Exploration‎

Fisheries Sector In Djibouti Receives Boost ‎With US$100,000 Grant

IGAD Vows To Take On Somali Warlords‎‎‎

Somali Pirates Hijack Fuel Tanker: Official

Fort Riley Soldiers Deploy to the Horn of Africa‎‎

2.5 Million People Affected By Drought - Meles‎‎

South African Firm Wins Bid To Administer ‎Ethio-Djibouti Railway‎

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Bringing An African Dictator To Justice‎‎

Support Somaliland Has Been Invited To ‎Chancellor Gordon Brown’s Speech About ‎The Millennium Development Goals‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

UK Parliament: Written Answers‎‎‎

Killers Of Somali Cabbie Get Longest ‎Sentences Allowed

Toll Rises In Bahrain Boat Disaster‎

African Fair Trade Shows Its Own Face

Stop These Warlords‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somaliland: The International Community Should ‎Recognize and Support Right to Development‎

Somaliland: WS On The Case Of ‎Somaliland

SOMALILAND: Exiles Return Home As Investors

Embrace Asylum Seekers: Survivor's Final Wish

Opinions

Is CARE An International Organization Or Part ‎Of Somaliland Ministry Of Planning?‎

Awdal Region And The Emerging Businesses‎‎‎

Somaliland Citizens Rights Versus Abusers Of ‎Office Power‎

A Private Visit To The Somali Region In ‎Ethiopia‎‎‎

Expelling CARE Isn’t The Answer; Firing The ‎Minister Is‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎

Somaliland Must Respond To The Unfounded ‎Allegations of Yemen And Somalia


By Somalilandtimes network

The tourist boat was on a dinner cruise about 1km off shore

Manama, Bahrain, March 31, 2006 – At least 57 people are now confirmed to have   died after a tourist boat carrying   more than   130 passengers on a dinner cruise capsized and sank   off the coast of Bahrain, rescue officials say.

Youssif al-Ghatam, the coastguard commander, told a news conference that 63 people had so far been rescued.

He said most of those on board the boat were of Asian origin, but passengers also included Europeans and Arabs.

The death toll from different nations was: India 17, Britain 13, Pakistan five, South Africa four, the Philippines three, Singapore two, Germany one and Ireland one,   an Interior Ministry official said.

Officials   said the boat had been hired by a local contracting company for a cruise and there were indications it was carrying many more passengers than it was licensed to.

Weather conditions at the time were said to be near perfect.

Organizers said around 150 people had signed up for   a dinner cruise but around 130 were believed to have been on board when the boat sank on Thursday night, around 1.5km off the coast.

One witness said the boat capsized when too many passengers gathered on one end of the   100-metre long vessel.

Attack ruled out

US and Bahraini officials said there was no indication that the sinking was the result of an attack.

"Up to this moment, it appears totally unlikely," Ghatam said.

Sheikh Rashid bin Abdulla Al Khalifa, the Bahraini interior minister,   earlier said most of the ferry's passengers were employees of a Bahrain-based company.

Television footage showed survivors in shock and their hair still wet, squatting on the floor of a hospital.

A US Navy spokesman said divers and small Navy vessels were helping in the rescue operations.

Source: Agencies


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