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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 9
    May
    2013
    8:04am, EDT

    Two passengers vanish from Carnival cruise ship

    A search by air and sea is underway for a man, 30, and woman, 27, who can be seen in surveillance video falling from the Carnival Spirit's deck Wednesday night. Their disappearance was discovered when the ship docked in Sydney Harbor. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Two passengers went overboard while a Carnival cruise ship was sailing off the east coast of Australia, officials said on Thursday.

    A vast area of sea was being scoured by aircraft and boats in an attempt to find the missing 30-year-old man and  26-year-old woman.

    They were reported missing when the Carnival Spirit docked at Sydney Overseas Passenger Terminal at 11:30 a.m. Thursday local time (9:30 p.m. Wednesday ET) after 10 days at sea, New South Wales Police said in a statement.

    They had been traveling with family and friends, according to the cruise ship firm. 

    Police said surveillance camera footage determined the two missing people went overboard at about 8:50 p.m. Wednesday local time (6:50 a.m. ET Wednesday), more than 14 hours before the alarm was raised.

    William West / AFP - Getty Images

    Two police officers check for fingerprints on the balcony of the cabin of the two passengers who went overboard.

    “Officers are investigating the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of the pair and, in these early stages, are focused on the search efforts,” the police statement said.

    Police said a “thorough search” was made of the ship after staff contacted officers. Police then looked through the surveillance camera footage and established that the missing people had gone overboard.

    New South Wales Police Superintendent Mark Hutchings told reporters that investigators were having the video enhanced in a bid to determine whether the couple had jumped or had fallen by accident, according to The Associated Press. No life preservers were missing, he added.

    The incident is not considered suspicious, according to The Austrailian.

    "This is a tragic event at the moment, but we're holding out hope we might be able to find these people alive," Hutchings added.

    Police aircraft and boats were involved the search and the Australian Maritime Safety Authority also sent a plane to look for them.

    A spokeswoman for the authority said they were searching an area of 120 square nautical miles. “People can survive in the water for quite some time,” she added.

    The couple had been among 2,680 passengers on a South Pacific cruise.

    Peter Taylor, spokesman for the ship's operator, Carnival Cruise Lines, said in a statement on Thursday that "the guests in question were traveling with family and friends, and initial reports indicated that the couple was last seen on board the vessel last night,” the AP reported.

    "The ship immediately initiated standard missing person procedures, including a full search of the vessel, as per protocol," he added.

    Carnival Cruise Lines is a subsidiary of Miami-based Carnival Corp., the world's largest cruise operator, the AP said. 

    Slideshow: Luxury cruise ship runs aground

    /

    The Costa Concordia, carrying more than 4,200 passengers, ran aground Jan. 13 off the coast of Italy killing 32 people - including two Americans.

    Launch slideshow

    Last year, the Costa Concordia ran aground off the coast of Italy, killing 32 people. Costa is a division of Carnival Corp.

    Also last year, the Costa Allegra caught fire and lost power in the Indian Ocean, leaving passengers without working toilets, running water or air conditioning for three days.

    In February, passengers aboard the Carnival Triumph spent five days without power in the Gulf of Mexico after an engine-room fire disabled the vessel. Those on board complained of squalid conditions, including overflowing toilets and food shortages.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • High-seas safety in spotlight a year after deadly Costa Concordia crash
    • Coast Guard finds fuel leak caused engine fire on Carnival Triumph
    • More trouble for Carnival: One ship stuck as a second limps home

    318 comments

    The sharks say thank you for the tasty snack.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: missing, search, australia, cruise-ship, carnival, featured, passengers
  • 8
    Nov
    2012
    7:40am, EST

    Guatemalans huddle in streets after earthquake kills dozens

    Johan Ordonez / AFP - Getty Images

    A girls looks inside a house damaged by an earthquake on the eve in San Marcos, 260 km from Guatemala City, on Thursday, Nov. 8, 2012, a day after a 7.4-magnitude hit off the Pacific coast of the country.

    By NBC News wire services

    Updated 5:25 p.m. ET

    SAN MARCOS, Guatemala — Guatemalans fearing aftershocks huddled in the dark and frigid streets of this mountain town wrapped in blankets early Thursday, while others crowded inside its hospital, the only building left with electricity after a powerful earthquake killed at least 52 people and left dozens more missing.

    Crews worked through the night in San Marcos, searching rubble for survivors and more dead following the magnitude 7.4 quake that struck Wednesday near Guatemala's border with Mexico.

    Local Red Cross chief Carlos Enrique Alvarado told Reuters 75 homes were destroyed in San Marcos alone and authorities said damage to the prison forced them to transfer 101 inmates to another jail. Officials told The Associated Press that most of 100 missing were from San Marcos.


    The quake, which was 20 miles deep, was centered 15 miles off the coastal town of Champerico and 100 miles southwest of Guatemala City. It was the strongest earthquake to hit Guatemala since a 1976 temblor that killed 23,000.

    PhotoBlog: Desperate search continues for quake survivors in Guatemala

    In the town of San Cristobal Cochu, firefighters picked at a collapsed house trying to dig out 10 members of one family, including a 4-year-old child, who were buried, fire department spokesman Ovidio Perez told the radio station Emisoras Unidas.

    Volunteers carrying boxes of medical supplies began arriving in the area in western Guatemalan late Wednesday.

    Johan Ordonez / AFP - Getty Images

    A firefighter looks bodies of people who died in the earthquake that hit San Marcos, Guatemala, on Wednesday.

    Eblin Cifuentes, a 26-year-old law student, and a group of his classmates already were collecting medical supplies as part of a school drive to provide aid for the only hospital in San Marcos, a poor, mainly indigenous mountain area of subsistence farms. When the quake hit, the group decided to bring everything they had collected.

    "Thank God nothing happened to us and that's why we have to help out," Cifuentes told the AP.

    Deadly quake rocks Guatemala, is felt in Mexico City

    Rescue workers in bright yellow helmets worked through the night pulling bodies from the rubble-strewn streets of San Pedro Sacatepequez, San Marcos, as dazed locals looked on, taking stock of the damage.

    A magnitude 7.4 earthquake in Guatemala has killed at least 48 people and left dozens of others missing. NBCNews.com's Alex Witt reports.

    "Thank God we're alive," resident Arnulfo Portillo told Reuters. "To be honest, there's quite a few families who have been hit badly, but we're a tight-knight community and we'll come out on top."

    Hundreds of frightened townspeople stayed in the open, refusing to go back inside after more than five strong aftershocks shook the area.

    President Otto Perez Molina said that 40 people died in the state of San Marcos and eight more were killed in the neighboring state of Quetzaltenango.

    PhotoBlog: Wrecked buildings, crushed cars and rescues

    Mom: 'He's not dead. Get him out'
    Hundreds of people crammed into the hallways of San Marcos' small hospital after the quake seeking help for injured family members. Some complained they were not getting care quickly enough.

    Ingrid Lopez, who bought in a 72-year-old aunt whose legs were crushed by a falling wall, said she had waited hours for an X-ray. "We ask the president to improve conditions at the hospital," she told the AP. "There isn't enough staff."

    More than 300 firefighters, policemen and civilians dug desperately at a half-ton mound of sand at a quarry trying to rescue seven people believed buried alive. Among those under the sand was a 6-year-old boy who had accompanied his grandfather to work.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "I want to see Giovanni! I want to see Giovanni!" the boy's mother, 42-year-old Francisca Ramirez, frantically cried. "He's not dead. Get him out."

    By Wednesday night, firefighters had dug out two bodies from the quarry, including Giovanni.

    President Perez flew to San Marcos to view the damage in this lush mountainous region of 50,000 indigenous farmers and ranchers, many belonging to the Mam ethnic group.

    "One thing is to hear about what happened and another thing entirely is to see it," he told The Associated Press. "As a Guatemalan I feel sad ... to see mothers crying for their lost children."

    Perez said the government would pay for the funerals of all victims in the impoverished region.

    Girl died while playing
    Efrain Ramos helped load a tiny casket carrying the body of his 6-year-old niece from San Marcos' morgue to a waiting pickup truck.

    "The little girl died when a wall fell over her," a shocked Ramos told a reporter. He said the girl was playing in her room when the quake hit.

    Sobbing uncontrollably, the girl's mother hugged the coffin wrapped with white lace and tulle.

    The quake caused terror over an unusually wide area, with damage reported in all but one of Guatemala's 22 states and shaking felt as far away as Mexico City, 600 miles to the northwest.

    In Guatemala City, 100 miles from the quake's epicenter, the streets filled with office workers forced to evacuate buildings, although most soon returned to work.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    25 comments

    I have been to Guatemala numerous times and fell in love with both it's charming and delightful residents and it's gorgeous landscape and lovely scenery. It truly is the "land of eternal spring".

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    Explore related topics: guatemala, earthquake, search, featured, san-marcos

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