WELLINGTON,
New Zealand (AP) — The captain and the navigator of a ship that ran
aground on a New Zealand reef last year in what authorities have called
the country's worst maritime environmental disaster were each sentenced
Friday to seven months in jail.
About 400 tons of fuel oil spilled
on Astrolabe Reef near Tauranga and at least 2,000 sea birds died in
the Oct. 5 grounding of the cargo ship Rena.
Judge Robert Wolff
from the Tauranga District Court sentenced the ship's captain, Mauro
Balomaga, and navigating officer, Leonil Relon, both of the Philippines.
The two had already pleaded guilty to operating the ship dangerously
and altering documents after the crash. They had earlier been granted
name suppression by the court, but that expired when they were
sentenced.
A preliminary report released by transport
investigators in March found that the Rena took shortcuts to try to
reach port by a deadline.
Maritime New Zealand, the agency responsible for shipping in New Zealand, said it was pleased with the sentences.
Keith
Manch, Maritime New Zealand's director, said in an email Friday that an
investigation by his agency found that the two senior officers, who
were responsible for navigating the ship, had breached basic principles
of safe navigation in their rush to get to the port. He said that even
after a series of missteps, there was still a chance the men could have
averted the disaster.
About 10 minutes before the 2 a.m. crash, he said, the reef appeared as an echo reading on the Rena's radar.
"At this stage, there was sufficient time to make an effective alteration of course and avoid the reef," Manch wrote.
Instead,
the captain assumed the reading came from a small ship, Manch said.
After unsuccessfully trying to look for the ship in the dead of night,
Manch said, the captain dismissed it as a false reading and continued on
into the reef.
Manch said that both officers acknowledged making
alterations after the grounding to the ship's GPS log, its passage plan
and its computer to mislead investigating authorities.
"This
offending is also very serious in that it caused genuine confusion for
investigators trying to piece together the events that led to the
grounding," he said. "It is vital that when these types of events do
take place, we can find out how and why they have happened to help
prevent such an event happening again."
Costamare, the Greek-based company that owns the Rena, said in a statement that it acknowledged the verdict against the two men.
"We
will continue to meet our responsibilities, as their employer, to
ensure their welfare and that of their families, as they complete their
sentences," the company wrote.
The wreck of the Rena remains on
the reef. It split in two earlier this year, with the stern section
sinking and the bow section remaining above water. Salvage crews
continue the slow process of removing containers from the wreck.
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