Cruise passenger, 80, found dead after being abandoned on Great Barrier
Reef island
[October 31, 2025]
By ROD McGUIRK
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — An 80-year-old cruise passenger has been
found dead on a Great Barrier Reef island, a day after she was
accidentally abandoned there by the ship’s crew.
The passenger’s daughter Katherine Rees on Thursday accused the cruise
company Coral Expeditions of a “failure of care and common sense” that
left her mother Suzanne Rees to die alone.
Suzanne Rees, a Sydney resident, was on the second day of a cruise
circumnavigating Australia when she disembarked the Coral Adventurer
last Saturday at Lizard Island. She planned to hike with other
passengers to a mountain lookout.
The ship left the resort island around five hours before reporting her
missing late on Saturday, officials said.
“We are shocked and saddened that the Coral Adventurer left Lizard
Island after an organised excursion without my Mum,” Katherine Rees, who
also lives in Sydney, said in a statement.
“From the little we have been told, it seems that there was a failure of
care and common sense. We understand from the police that it was a very
hot day, and Mum felt ill on the hill climb. She was asked to head down,
unescorted. Then the ship left, apparently without doing a passenger
count. At some stage in that sequence, or shortly after, Mum died,
alone,” the daughter added.
The crew of a search helicopter spotted Suzanne Rees’ body the next day
about 50 meters (55 yards) off the hiking trail to the lookout, The
Australian newspaper reported.
She appeared to have fallen from a cliff or slope, the newspaper said.
Katherine Rees said she hoped a coroner's inquiry would “find out what
the company should have done that might have saved Mum’s life.”
Police said in a statement a coroner would investigate the
“non-suspicious death.” The coroner's court also confirmed the death had
been referred for investigation.

[to top of second column]
|

This undated photo provided by Katherine Rees Thursday, Oct. 30,
2025, shows her mother, Suzanne Rees, posing for a photograph in
Australia. (Katherine Rees via AP)

Coral Expeditions chief executive Mark Fifield said his company was
fully cooperating with official investigations into the death. He
said it would be inappropriate to comment while those investigations
were underway.
“We have expressed our heartfelt condolences to the Rees family and
remain deeply sorry that this has occurred,” Fifield said in a
statement.
“We continue to provide our full support to the Rees family through
this difficult time,” he added.
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority, a safety regulator, is
investigating why Rees may not have been accounted for when
passengers were boarding at Lizard Island.
The tragedy is also being investigated by a workplace safety
watchdog.
Rees was first noticed missing when she didn’t appear in the ship's
dining room for dinner, the newspaper said.
The cruise ship returned to Lizard Island early Sunday morning.
Australia’s safety standards for its Great Barrier Reef tourism
industry came under intense scrutiny after American couple Tom and
Eileen Lonergan were abandoned at sea during a group scuba dive in
1998. The tour boat crew didn’t realize they were missing until two
days later. The Lonergans' bodies were never found.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |