2007 Tonlé Sap dragon boat accident

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Date23 November 2007 (2007-11-23)
LocationTonlé Sap, Cambodia
Causecollision with a pontoon
Deaths5
2007 Tonlé Sap dragon boat accident
Victims of the accident. (L–R) Chee Wei Cheng, Jeremy Goh, Reuben Kee, Stephen Loh, and Poh Boon San
Date23 November 2007 (2007-11-23)
LocationTonlé Sap, Cambodia
Causecollision with a pontoon
Deaths5
Non-fatal injuries17

On 23 November 2007, a 22-member Singapore national dragon boat team capsized after colliding with a pontoon in Tonlé Sap, Cambodia, leading to the deaths of five Singaporean dragon boat paddlers after they were sucked under the pontoon by strong water currents.

They were participating in Bon Om Touk, an annual Cambodian festival. The five Singaporeans were found on 25 November floating downstream towards Phnom Penh. They were later identified by relatives and brought to Calmette Hospital.[1]

The Singapore national dragon boat team had arrived in Cambodia on the morning of 23 November, the first time that Singapore had participated in the Bon Om Touk, where the Tonlé Sap River reverses in its water flow towards the lake. Before beginning, the Singapore team noticed that the currents were stronger that day and that the water was dirty.[2] The Singapore team also decided to not wear lifejackets as it would have allowed them to "paddle faster".[3][4]

Incident

Tonlé Sap River where the incident occurred, pictured in 2003

On 23 November, after the race, the Singapore team was being brought back to shore by a safety vessel. However, after seeing other teams paddle back to shore, opted to paddle back themselves to practice and get a better feel of the water conditions.[5]

Upon reaching the pontoon, they slowly navigated the 50m gap between the two pontoons and began angling the boat halfway to turn into the docking point, however, a sudden shift in direction caused the dragon boat to capsize sideways and all 22 dragon boat paddlers and the boat were sucked underneath the pontoon by strong currents. Out of the 22, only 17 paddlers could be recovered.[2]

Search efforts

Soon after, the first responders were eight divers and five boats from a speedboat workshop near Chroy Changvar Bridge. Nhim Vanda, Head of Cambodia's Disaster Management Agency, was called on by then-Prime Minister of Cambodia Hun Sen to aid in the search efforts.[2]

On 24 November, the search party had grown to 400 peopleCambodian police, navy, and fishermen. 3 million riel was offered to find the paddlers and the search was widened to the whole venue of the festival. By midday, they tried attaching fishing nets to the bottom of search boats in an attempt to pick up the paddlers. At about 3 p.m., Singapore sent a 8-man Naval Diving Unit team to aid in the search.[2]

On 25 November, Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines offered to help in the search efforts. After replacing the fishing nets with metal hooks, they found the first body at Koh Pich at 8 a.m. and two more bodies soon after, 40 hours after the incident. The final two bodies resurfaced on their own.[2][6]

Victims

The victims are as follows.[7]

  • Chee Wei Cheng, 20
  • Jeremy Goh, 24
  • Stephen Loh, 31
  • Poh Boon San, 27
  • Reuben Kee, 23

Aftermath

See also

References

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