Please do not show again Close
Wednesday, November 25, 2009  | 
select country C
 
select country

BREAKING NEWS | Builders look abroad amid Dubai slump
EUR | GBP Up 1.109 ,  USD | EUR Down 0.667 ,  USD | GBP Down 0.602

Death toll hits 17 in Gulf boat tragedy

Rescue workers have recovered 11 bodies from a commercial vessel that sank off the coast of Qatar bringing to 17 the number of dead while 13 other people are still missing, a newspaper said on Friday.

The boat sank on Tuesday near the entrance to the Doha canal but the Interior Ministry said rescuers managed to save five of the 35 people on board, most of them south Asians.

Rescuers are continuing the hunt for the 13 missing, the Peninsula newspaper said, adding that the captain and chief engineer, both from Indonesia, were among those who survived the tragedy.

Media reports have said that most those who were on board the ill-fated vessel were from Nepal and India. One Bangladeshi is among those feared dead.

An investigation is under way to determine the cause of the accident.


To keep updated with the very latest news sign up to the Maktoob Business newsletter now.
AFP
User Comments
Add Your Comment
Name:
Email:
City:
Code:
Comments:
0 of 1000
 

Ranking
HBK Power Cleaning
856th most read about company
1243rd most written about company
305th most discussed company
518th most emailed about company
Demas Marine
857th most read about company
1244th most written about company
306th most discussed company
519th most emailed about company
Indonesia hits Arab states with worker ban
11/25/2009 8:39:15 AM
18 | |
That's why Pakistani govt doesn't allow their women to work as house maids anywhere abroad. If they do so, they do it with their own will and responsibility, which is illegal of course MORE
Iran couples arrested for partner swapping
11/25/2009 8:32:54 AM
3 | |
Which woman, in her true sense, would agree for a temporary marriage of a 'few hours'? MORE
Rio does away with coconuts on beaches
11/25/2009 7:39:29 AM
1 | |
Save the coconut - ban the cans! I would far prefer to see coconuts lying around, than cans of coke or packs of crisps... So too would - I am sure - Brazil's tourists MORE