Simshar incident

Simshar incident refers to an incident whereby four people died before or after an explosion took place aboard a fishing vessel named Simshar off the eastern coast of Malta. The incident took place on July 11, 2008.[1]

Incident

On the morning of 7 July 2008, Simshar departed the coast of Marsaxlokk on a fishing trip, expected to return on 11 July. The boat was carrying five people - its owner, Simon Bugeja, his father Karmenu Bugeja, his 11-year-old son Theo Bugeja, a Maltese man named Noel Carabott, and a Somali man named Abdulrahman Abdala Gedi. It is believed that a blast[2] took place on board the vessel on 11 July, destroying the boat. The five people on board survived the blast and survived for several days adrift a makeshift raft made of floating debris from the blast.[3]

Victims

Four of the five people on board the Simshar died in the days following the incident, Simon Bugeja being the sole survivor. According to Simon Bugeja, Abdulrahman Abdala Gedi died on 12 July, followed by Noel Carabott on 13 July, Karmenu Bugeja on 14 July, and Theo Bugeja on 18 July.[3] The bodies of three of the victims were recovered, however that of Theo Bugeja was never found.[1] Following an extensive search by the Armed Forces of Malta, and the Maltese fishing community, a fishing vessel called the Grecale found Simon Bugeja alive on 18 July.[1]

The incident was dramatised by Maltese director Rebecca Cremona through a 2014 film titled Simshar.[4]

gollark: ...
gollark: This is degenerating into pointlessness.
gollark: A conversation between whom?
gollark: 2th warning...
gollark: 4rd warning!

References

  1. "Fishermen mum on Simshar tragedy report". Times of Malta. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  2. "What caused the Simshar explosion?". Times of Malta. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  3. "The Simshar Tragedy: Search for missing boy continues". The Malta Independent. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  4. Jean Pierre Borg; Charlie Cauchi (2015). World Film Locations: Malta. Intellect Books. p. 74. ISBN 9781783204984.

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