Dozens injured, 2 critically, as cruise ship rolls

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A steering problem caused a Princess Cruises ship steaming from Florida to roll abruptly to the left Tuesday, injuring dozens of people, officials said.
Injured passengers are attended to after being evacuated from the cruise ship Crown Princess in Cape Canaveral
Injured passengers are attended to Tuesday after being evacuated from the cruise ship Crown Princess after the ship listed near its port in Port Canaveral, Fla. Joe Skipper / Reuters

A steering problem caused a new cruise ship to roll abruptly Tuesday, throwing passengers and crew to the deck and injuring dozens, including two critically, officials said.

One passenger said seawater flooded several upper decks of the Crown Princess, forcing water from a swimming pool “like a mini-tsunami.”

The vessel, with about 3,100 passengers, had just departed Port Canaveral on Florida’s east coast en route to New York when it listed badly to its port side, said Coast Guard spokesman Petty Officer James Judge.

The ship then righted itself before returning to port, where the Coast Guard said all passengers and crew had been accounted for.

Besides an adult and a child who were critically hurt, another 10 people were seriously hurt and about 30 had lesser injuries, said Cape Canaveral Fire Rescue Capt. Jim Watson.

Thirty-three people were taken to hospitals, he said. Most had bruises and minor back and neck injures.

Tom Daus, 32, was sunbathing on the ship’s upper deck when the ship began to list.

“It became very disastrous because ... tables, glasses, lounge chairs went flying,” he told The Associated Press in a cell phone interview. “I was just holding on for dear life onto the banister of the ship.”

Daus, of New York City, said several of the upper decks were flooded and the elevators were inoperable.

Like a mini-tsunami’
“The water came gushing out of the pool like a mini-tsunami,” he said. “It was really scary. People who were in the pool were shoved out.”

Passenger Carol O’Connell told NBC’s Miami affiliate, WTVJ-TV, by phone that people raced for life jackets.

“The captain sounded so terrified, which led to my feeling of more panic,” she said.

Stan Payne, CEO of the Canaveral Port Authority, said the cruise line wanted passengers to wait until other lodging could be arranged, but were free to leave the vessel if they wanted. He said the ship would remain in port for several days.

Cruise line company investigating
Princess Cruises, one of 12 brands operated by Miami-based Carnival Corp., said it was investigating the cause of the incident.

Before leaving Port Canaveral, the ship had just completed a nine-day Western Caribbean cruise, she said. The 113,000-ton ship began sailing a month ago and was making its fourth voyage.

“We deeply regret this incident, and are doing everything we can to make our passengers as comfortable as possible under these difficult circumstances,” company spokeswoman Julie Benson said.

Martha Stewart christened the Crown Princess last month before it embarked on its maiden voyage to the Caribbean from its home terminal in the New York borough of Brooklyn.

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