COTABATO CITY, Maguindanao — Officials of Sultan Kudarat town in Maguindanao province and this city have called for greater regulation on the operation of boats that ferry passengers along the Rio Grande de Mindanao after five people died in a collision of two boats on Saturday night.
Residents in communities along the banks of Rio Grande, Mindanao’s longest river, use boats in their daily commute. Mainly, these boats ply routes between villages of Sultan Kudarat town and Cotabato City, the economic center of central Mindanao.
Banjo Mampon, Sultan Kudarat municipal administrator, said a bigger boat, with at least 10 passengers, was heading to Barangay Katidtuan, Sultan Kudarat, from Cotabato City when it was hit by a smaller Cotabato City-bound boat at 8:45 p.m. on Saturday.
All passengers and boat operators were thrown off the wooden vessels. Five of them drowned while others were able to swim to the riverbank or were rescued by passing boats.
No lights, warning devices
Mampon said the boats involved in the collision were without lights or warning devices to make them visible to other vessels at night. He said it was raining when the accident happened.
Sultan Kudarat Mayor Shameem Mastura reminded some 200 boat operators and owners of a local ordinance prohibiting trips beyond 7 p.m. “for security and safety reasons.”
Mastura ordered boat owners and operators to provide their passengers with life jackets, equip their boats with lights and prepare a manifest.
Operating hours
The mayor said motorized boats in Sultan Kudarat would be allowed to operate only from 5 a.m. to 7 p.m., except for emergencies. Those who travel to and from Sultan Kudarat beyond 7 p.m. must secure authorization from the police and military, he said.
To enforce these regulations, Mastura said he created a multisectoral task force, named “Bantay Pulangi,” to monitor all motorized banca traversing the Rio Grande and its tributaries.
Cotabato City Mayor Cynthia Guiani-Sayadi said the city government would also require all motorized boats traveling to and from the city’s wharf to install lights and early warning equipment to avoid accidents. —Edwin O. Fernandez