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Boat tragedy: Kerala admits lapses, lifejackets to be mandatory

By IANS,

Thiruvananthapuram : Admitting that there had been lapses, the Kerala government Thursday said the Thekkady boat tragedy was “an accident” and would not hit tourist inflow to the state that is promoted abroad as ‘God’s own country’.

“It is a waterway accident like a road accident. There is no gravity or impact beyond that. It will not hit Kerala’s tourism sector,” Kerala Water Resources Minister N.K. Premachandran told IANS over phone from Thekkady.

Admitting that there had been no proper systems in place to guide the passengers travelling in the boat, Premachandran said the government would take all precautions, including ensuring that every passenger wore a lifejacket, to avoid such accidents in future.

There were lifejackets on board, he said, but now it would be mandatory to wear one.

He asked the media to not give “new dimensions” to the tragedy.

At least 37 people were killed Wednesday evening when the boat carrying 76 tourists capsized in a lake in the Periyar wildlife sanctuary in central Kerala.

Premachandran said the ill-fated boat, owned by the Kerala Tourism Development Corporation (KTDC), had been given a fitness certificate by the Indian Registry of Shipping, an internationally recognised organisation.

“The boat was a perfectly built one. It was certified by the Indian Registry of Shipping,” the minister said.