Carnival Cruise Lines President and CEO Gerry Cahill on Tuesday apologized to
passengers stranded after an engine room fire left 4,229 people adrift on one
of the cruise giant's ships in the Gulf of Mexico.
"No one here from Carnival is happy about the conditions on board the
ship and we obviously are very, very sorry about what's taken place," Cahill
said at a press conference at the company's headquarters in Doral. "There's no
question that conditions on board the ship are very challenging. I can assure
you that everyone on board in the Carnival team and everyone shoreside is
doing everything they can to make our guests as comfortable as possible."
Passengers aboard the fire-stricken Carnival Triumph have one more full
day at sea without air conditioning or widespread use of toilets before they
reach land in Mobile, Ala. under the power of two tugboats. A U.S. Coast Guard
vessel is escorting the ship in case of emergencies.
"If something does happen, we're out there to help," said Petty Officer
Richard Brahm.
Cahill said the company has lined up more than 1,500 hotel rooms in New
Orleans and Mobile for Thursday night and 20 charter flights to fly people to
Houston on Friday. The company has canceled the ship's Feb. 11 and 16
sailings. For those who just want to get home, Carnival is arranging for
motorcoach service to Houston and Galveston.
By the time they arrive, it will have been a longer trip than they
bargained for, and much less of a vacation.
The 14-year-old ship left Galveston for a four-night Western Caribbean
cruise on Thursday with 3,143 passengers and 1,086 crew on board; it was
scheduled to return Monday morning.
But Sunday morning, fire broke out in an engine room for unknown reasons
as the ship sailed off Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. The blaze was put out by
automatic extinguishing systems, but the ship lost propulsion and was forced
to operate on emergency generator power.
Since then, passengers have complained of stench, human waste in public
areas, heat and long lines for food.
Texas resident Brent Nutt, whose wife is on the cruise ship, said Monday
that she told him the "whole boat stinks extremely bad" and some passengers
were getting sick and throwing up, the Associated Press reported. Nutt said
his wife reported "water and feces all over the floor."
Jimmy Mowlam, 63, told the Associated Press his 37-year-old son, Rob
Mowlam, told him by phone Monday night that the lack of ventilation onboard
Carnival Cruise Lines' Carnival Triumph had made it too hot to sleep inside.
He said Rob and his new bride are among the many passengers who have set up
camp on the ocean liner's decks and in its common areas.
"He said up on deck it looks like a shanty town, with sheets, almost like
tents, mattresses, anything else they can pull to sleep on," said Mowlam, 63,
who is from southeast Texas.
Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor-in chief of the popular website
CruiseCritic.com, said many frequent cruisers take such incidents in stride --
but, she said, the fact that there have been several fires on ships in recent
years could be cause for concern.
In a strikingly similar case, the Carnival Splendor was set adrift in the
Pacific in November 2010 after a major fire. It was out of service for about
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