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Passengers, heading home after cruise ship fire, recall fear, praise crew
Saturday, March 25, 2006
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MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica -- Some of the passengers were stirred from sleep by the smell of smoke. Others were jolted awake by a fire alarm, then startled to see sparks drifting past the ship's windows in the Caribbean moonlight.

Some passengers, like Beth Bostrom, feared the worst as they saw flames on board the Star Princess as the ship made its way from the Cayman Islands to Jamaica.
"I looked to my left and saw this huge fire raging," Bostrom said. "I looked back into the room and screamed, 'Oh my God, there's a fire! The boat is on fire!"

Bostrom, a Nashville, Tenn., resident who was celebrating her 15th wedding anniversary with a weeklong vacation at sea, was among hundreds of passengers making their way home Friday and Saturday after the fire that damaged about 150 cabins on the gleaming white cruise ship.
Her husband, Marty, said smoke was billowing up the stairwell and over the top deck by the time they left their cabin in the pre-dawn hours Thursday.

"There was a point in time when I wasn't sure we were going to make it out of there," he said.
A big charred spot on the Star Princess was the only evidence from afar of the fire as it was moored in Montego Bay, on Jamaica's northwest coast.

One passenger, Richard Liffridge, 72, of Locust Grove, Ga., died from what Princess Cruises said was cardiac arrest. Eleven people were injured, including two who remained hospitalized with injuries from smoke inhalation.

Many passengers awaiting flights home from Montego Bay praised crewmembers' response to the fire. The company said it would refund the cost of the vacations for all 2,600 passengers and offered a 25 percent discount on their next cruise.

"If we did go on a cruise, we'd go on Princess," Beth Bostrom said. "We were impressed with them."

Richard Cox, a passenger who awoke to the smell of smoke, said the crew made passengers feel safe.

"You could see the lifeboats, they were getting them ready to go. That's when I knew there was something really important," said Cox, of Mason, Ohio. "When I saw that I went 'Oh boy, we're really going to go off the ship."'

But the passengers did not abandon ship. Instead, they waited in designated safety zones for several hours, as they are instructed in the emergency drills that are required for all passengers at the start of a voyage. The ship then made its way to Montego Bay and canceled its final stop on a private island in the Bahamas.

A smoldering cigarette is suspected as the cause of the fire, but Princess Cruises spokeswoman Julie Benson said authorities were still investigating.

Hours after the ship arrived in Montego Bay on Thursday, passengers boarded buses that took them to hotels in the nearby resort towns of Negril and Ocho Rios. Other passengers remained on board.

The Star Princess was sailing from Grand Cayman to Jamaica when the blaze started. Reportedly built at a cost of over $430 million, it has four swimming pools, half a dozen restaurants and dining rooms, a casino, two theaters, and several nightclubs. It stretches about three football fields long.

David Haltom said he and his wife were honeymooning on the cruise. Thursday morning they awoke to the smell of smoke and sounds of commotion in the halls.

"Everybody ran. There were people in nightgowns and robes because it happened so fast," Haltom said by phone from his Negril hotel.

The crew lowered lifeboats to the ship deck and instructed passengers to grab their life vests, he said.

After the blaze was extinguished, passengers were allowed to retrieve belongings from their smoke-blackened cabins.
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