Investigators have yet to identify the cause of the fire that
started at about 11 p.m. (1500 GMT) on Wednesday off the
southern island of Basilan, when many passengers were asleep in
air-conditioned cabins on the ferry's lower deck.
"I thought I was dreaming but when I opened my eyes it was dark
and we were surrounded by smoke," Mina Nani, 46, a passenger on
the MV Lady Mary Joy 3, told DZRH radio.
She said she survived by jumping off the vessel and sharing a
floatation device with another passenger until they were
rescued.
There were conflicting figures of the number of people on the
ferry, which officials said was not overloaded. The coast guard
said 225 people including 36 crew were rescued.
Eleven people, including three children, drowned after jumping
off the burning ship, while 18 died in the blaze on board,
Governor Hadjiman Hataman Salliman told DZRH.
"We have yet to explore the entire ship because it's still hot,"
Salliman said of the beached vessel.
Commodore Rejard Marfe, coast guard chief in the Mindanao
region, told Reuters there was "chaos" after the spreading fire
roused people from their sleep and the 18 victims found onboard
were "totally burnt".
The Philippines, an archipelago of more than 7,600 islands, has
a poor record for maritime safety, with vessels often
overcrowded and many ageing ships in use.
In May, at least seven people died in a fire on a high-speed
ferry carrying 134 people.
In 1987, about 5,000 people died in the world's worst peacetime
shipping disaster, when an overloaded passenger ferry Dona Paz
collided with an oil tanker off Mindoro island south of the
capital, Manila.
(Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales; Editing by Ed Davies, Martin
Petty, Robert Birsel)
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