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    Why Didn’t Carnival Evacuate the Passengers from Its Stricken Cruise Ship?

    As the stricken Carnival Triumph is towed back to port in Mobile, Ala., the 3,143 passengers and 1,086 crew members stranded aboard are understandably restless. They’ve been stuck on board the ship since Sunday morning, when a fire in the ship’s engine room knocked out its propulsion system, leaving it stranded in the Gulf of Mexico.

    Reports of the passengers’ ordeal over the ensuing four days have been harrowing. According to text messages sent to relatives and interviews with people on board, the smell of rotting food abounds. Toilets are backed up, forcing many to use red biohazard bags to go to the bathroom. With the air-conditioning system offline, the staterooms are too hot to sleep in, and some passengers have reportedly moved their mattresses to the deck. According to a statement released by Carnival, only one dining room has reliable power for serving hot coffee and, sporadically, hot food.

    (MORE: Stricken Cruise Ship Adrift in Gulf of Mexico, Awaiting Tugboats)

    But possibly the worst part about the past week for the passengers of the Carnival Triumph is that there’s been no escape. So far, only two passengers have been moved off the ship: Rachel Alderete, 54, who was in desperate need of emergency kidney dialysis, was transported to the Triumph‘s sister ship the Carnival Legend on Tuesday to be taken to Texas for treatment. The following day a second passenger was taken off the ship because of a pre-existing medical condition, Carnival spokeswoman Joyce Oliva tells TIME. Both were moved to other Carnival ships that had diverted their courses in order to assist with the rescue mission.

    However, these emergency measures underscore a question on the minds of many observers: Why not take all the passengers off the stricken Carnival Triumph?

    It turns out that it’s not that simple. Just moving a single passenger is a delicate dance, according to Lieutenant Lily Zepeda, public-affairs officer for the U.S. Coast Guard District 8, which is coordinating the response to the cruise-ship crisis from its New Orleans–based office. The Coast Guard cutter Vigorous, a 210-ft. (64 m) vessel that was called on to escort the cruise ship just hours after it was disabled, launched a small boat to courier Alderete from the Triumph to the Legend. “Our small boat would come alongside one of the cruise ships, take the passenger and then go alongside the other cruise ship and drop the passenger off,” Zepeda explains to TIME.

    The whole process can take 15 minutes to an hour for just one person, making it an understandably arduous task to move all 4,200 people on board. (One passenger wasn’t even able to make the trip: according to the New York Times, Alderete’s sister was supposed to accompany her, but choppy waters prevented her departure.) And that’s assuming everyone is capable of the move. Among the passengers are likely many “that are really young, really old. We don’t know the physical fitness of everyone,” says Zepeda. All told, offloading the passengers with the help of the Vigorous could have taken longer than towing the ship back to shore.

    (PHOTOS: The Allure of the Oasis, the World’s Second-Largest Cruise Ship)

    Still, it couldn’t have been easy for the passengers on board the Triumph to watch as three working Carnival cruise liners stopped by to drop off hot prepared meals and nonperishable food. Unfortunately, none of the ships in the area had enough cabins to take on the Triumph’s 3,143 guests. “If it wasn’t a life-threatening medical emergency, we probably wouldn’t have gotten involved” in transferring passengers in the first place, Zepeda says.

    Despite the discomfort of the Triumph’s eight-day saga — by the end of which the ship’s sewage system had backed up and breakfast menus occasionally consisted of cold waffles and candy, according to the New York Times — conditions never got dire enough to prompt an evacuation. Lifeboats are deployed only in the case of emergency, and both Carnival and the Coast Guard agree that this situation didn’t fit the bill. “We evaluated a wide range of options, but the safest and most expedient solution was towing the ship back to port,” says Oliva. And despite its shortcomings, the Triumph “is still a stable and safe platform,” according to Zepeda. “Unfortunately, despite the discomfort, it’s probably the safest place for them to be, rather than trying to transfer them back and forth via another method.”

    Three tugboats have been slowly pulling the cruise ship back to port — a mission that ended up taking five days and was hampered Thursday afternoon just miles offshore by a broken tow line. For the passengers on board the Carnival Triumph, the end of the voyage can’t come soon enough.

    MORE: The High Seas: What Is Your Cruise Ship Dumping?

    647 comments

    • A president for everybody  •  2 days 3 hrs ago
      knowing just a little bit about the sea, how would you recommend moving 4,200 people off a ship safely? Safe is the key word!
      • dome200q 1 hr 13 mins ago
        And my very first post mentions I‘d side with the Captain's decision due to safety constraints. Asked and answered. On top of that, my post directly to you were not ambiguous at the least. You are choosing to either read what you want or troll for the halibut. On top of that you still failed to answer my question.

        Oh, Coasty, the one fatality on the MS Achille Lauro was wheelchair bound. Last time I checked, cruise lines do not require a physical to partake of their offerings – just green-backs.
    • Realist 2011  •  2 days 0 hrs ago
      How do you get 3,143 passengers to evacuate the Carnival Triumph? Announce that the Captain of the Costa Concordia has been helicoptered in to take over command of the ship.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  1 day 23 hrs ago
      Ship to ship transfers at sea are extremely dangerous and tricky - even for people trained and experienced in it. The Navy loses sailors transferring supplies at sea. The sea is not like your front yard. It moves. It moves a lot. Each ship would move too. But they wouldn't move like dancers. More like two people with six left feet. It would have been far to hazardous to try a transfer. MCPO ret
    • Big Oil is watching  •  2 days 2 hrs ago
      how about they have backup generators to power the ship so the toilets worked and the food did not spoil?? even some air conditioning?
    • Gverwtfr  •  2 days 2 hrs ago
      Watch them blame it on the new guy in the engine room.
    • Wisernow  •  1 day 16 hrs ago
      Go on a Cruise? "No thank-you!"
    • DAMIANM  •  2 days 3 hrs ago
      Trying to evacuate that many people in choppy water you could almost guarantee casualties. And some of the passengers are older, as stated and not as physically capable as most folks. From a safety standpoint towing them in was the best option. Doesn't mean it was a lot of fun for anyone but probably the best way to go.
    • Mark  •  2 days 0 hrs ago
      The Titanic was "horrible". This was just an inconvenience. It wasn't life-threatening.
    • Shanty  •  1 day 15 hrs ago
      A new reality show, Cruise Nightmare. They could have a different scenario every episode, backed up toilets one week, food poisoning the next, running aground, etc.
    • TK3  •  1 day 22 hrs ago
      Glad I hate crowds or I might have been unlucky enough to have been on the ill fated "ship of fools".
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