Travel between Lakshadweep
Islands and Kochi requires agonising wait for ship, berths
With Lakshadweep
administration’s largest passenger vessel M.V. Kavarathi docked at Cochin
Shipyard since the first week of January for repair that is expected to last
more than three months, the travel woes of islanders who shuttle between
Kavarathi and Kochi have increased manifold.
Travel between the islands
and mainland Kochi requires long wait for ships, which often do not stick to
the schedule.
Though the Union Territory
has 25 ships, which include 17 passenger vessels, four cargo vessels, two tugs,
one tanker, and one LPG cylinder carrier, there are widespread complaints that
they cancel schedules frequently without advance information. The vessels are
the lifeline of Lakshadweep islands and lack of online facility to book and
cancel tickets adds to passenger sufferings.
“Those who make bulk
booking in advance are not able to make cancellation at the right time because
of the lack of online facility. As the bookings remain valid, we are not able
to allow other passengers to use the vacant berths,’’ said a senior officer of
Lakshadweep administration.
Islanders blame
Lakshadweep Development Corporation Limited (LDCL) for their transportation
woes. Though it claims itself as the largest passenger vessel management
company in the country, LDCL is drawing flak for operating vessels that are not
maintained properly and don’t obey time schedule. Apart from M.V. Kavarathi,
eight other passenger vessels are undergoing short-term- and long-term repair
works.
Irked over LDCL and
Lakshadweep Administration’s neglect, various passenger bodies are on the path
of agitation. According to them, it is quite common for islanders to get
stranded in Kochi during festival seasons unable to get tickets to travel back
to their islands.
According to Komalam Koya,
a rights activist from the islands, it is not just about the lack of sufficient
ships but the lack of efficiency in maintaining existing ships. “The ship
operation was quite trouble-free when the Shipping Corporation of India managed
the whole operations,” he said.
According to Mohammed
Iqbal, a teacher from the islands, boosting the morale of officials of LDCL by
providing them standard salary remains vital to enhancing the quality of vessel
operations between Kochi and the islands. “While the ground staff gets good
remuneration, those who work on ships and other vessels are not paid properly,”
he said.
On its part, Lakshadweep
Development Corporation Limited cite fall in the number of ships available and
rise in demand for seats because of various festival seasons as the reasons for
the crisis.
Abdul Nazer, a resident of
Kavarathy, counters it. “They think there is demand for tickets to the islands
only during festival times. But there are over 4,000 students from the islands
studying in various educational institutions in Kerala. Many others frequent
hospitals in Kochi. They all require tickets on short order.”
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