Pandaw founder says ship evacuation was an overreaction

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The Kindat Pandaw and the pontoon bridge it struck.
The Kindat Pandaw and the pontoon bridge it struck. Source: Pandaw River Expeditions

The head of Pandaw River Expeditions is blaming a freelance tour guide for turning a "minor" accident on India's Ganges River into a panic.

Responding to reports last week from a journalist who was onboard the Kinat Pandaw when it hit a bridge on the Upper Ganges, Pandaw founder Paul Strachan said the guide overreacted by ordering an evacuation.

"This should have been the master's decision not the guide's," he wrote in a blog. "It could be argued that this was a correct precautionary measure, but it was a complete overreaction. It caused considerable distress for the passengers. For this we can only apologize. What was a relatively minor incident quickly became a drama. We are really sorry that the passengers had this experience."

Strachan said that an investigation found that the ship accidentally bumped into a floating bridge that was about to be opened to allow the ship passage.

He said the collision punched about an 8-inch gash in the hull, which allowed a “very small amount of water” to enter the sealed hull compartment. But he said the company's ships are designed to cope with such accidents and have bilge pumps and water-tight bulkheads.

"Collisions on busy waterways do occasionally happen, usually with other vessels, and crew can temporarily patch any hole in a moment using patch kits we carry on our ships,” he said.

Strachan also noted that Pandaw’s itineraries, which include sailings on remote rivers in Myanmar and Cambodia, are "not like cruising on the Rhine or Rhone, waterways with controlled flows and regulated levels."

"These are extreme rivers," he wrote. "These are intended to be adventurous. It is what we do."

He said the company is upfront with warnings about potential groundings and other challenges, challenges that he said offer the excitement that return Pandaw passengers "relish."

Still, Strachan said the company is working with its Indian partners to improve crew training "to ensure such a panic does not happen again and that there is a clear chain of command."

He said the company is also revising its Upper Ganges itinerary to avoid the section with pontoon bridges.

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