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New Zealand pays Samoa full US$3.6 million compensation after navy ship sinks on reef

The ecological impact of the wreck of the HMNZS Manawanui, which remains at the site a year later, is still being assessed

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Divers survey the area around the sunken HMNZS Manawanui off Upulo, Samoa on October 15, last year. Photo: New Zealand Defence Force/AP)
Associated Press
New Zealand’s government said on Monday it had agreed to pay 10 million tala (US$3.6 million) in compensation to Samoa’s government, a year after New Zealand sailors drove a navy ship aground on a reef off the Pacific Island nation.

All 75 people on board evacuated to safety as the boat foundered about 1.6km (one mile) off the coast of Upolu, Samoa’s second largest island, before it caught fire and sank.

The wreck of HMNZS Manawanui remains at the site of the sinking on October 6, last year, and a decision about whether it will remain there has not been made.

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The vessel sank due to failings of the crew and ship, an official inquiry found. The ship’s crew did not realise the vessel was on autopilot and believed something else had gone wrong as it ploughed towards the reef, according to a report that highlighted the lack of training, qualifications and experience among those on board.

Smoke rises from the sinking HMNZS Manawanui on October 6, last year. Photo: AP
Smoke rises from the sinking HMNZS Manawanui on October 6, last year. Photo: AP
The compensation announced by New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters on Monday was the full amount requested by Samoa’s government, his office said. It will be drawn from New Zealand military funds.
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“We have responded to the Government of Samoa’s request in full and with good faith,” Peters said in a statement. “We have always said we will do the right thing.”

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