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Passenger ferry carrying 116 passengers sinks off the coast of Guyana

Lifeboats from the sunken vessel
Lifeboats from the sunken vessel Copyright  Prime Minister Mark Phillips / Facebook
Copyright Prime Minister Mark Phillips / Facebook
By Harry Bligh
Published on Updated
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A distress call by the MV Barima to the coast guard was made just after 11pm local time. The vessel is said to be equipped with 250 life jackets, two rigid life boats and six inflatable life crafts.

A ferry carrying 116 passengers has sunk off the coast of Guyana.

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At least 66 people have been rescued from the MV Barima, which departed the capital, Georgetown, for Port Kaituma shortly after 3 pm on Saturday.

Guyana’s coast guard received a distress call at around 11 pm and responded alongside private vessels.

Prime Minister Mark Phillips told AFP that the search and rescue operation would continue in the daylight and that he expected the number of rescued people to go up. He shared an update and photos of the rescue operation on Facebook.

Juan Edghill, a government minister, said in a video posted on Facebook that medical teams had been sent to the area to care for survivors brought ashore by the coast guard and other rescue vessels.

Edghill said the ferry was equipped with 250 life jackets, two rigid life rafts and six inflatable life rafts.

The MV Barima was built in 1939 and is around 40 metres long, according to the maritime tracking website VesselFinder.

The ferry regularly operates between Georgetown and Port Kaituma, transporting passengers and cargo to communities in Guyana’s North West District.

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