Mysterious fate of Hong Kong's Jumbo Floating Restaurant
Mysterious fate of Hong Kong's Jumbo Floating Restaurant

Aberdeen Restaurant Enterprises released a statement saying that the Hong Kong’s Jumbo Floating Restaurant sinking as the watercraft had overturned.

It is situated near the Paracel Islands in the South China Sea after it encountered “adverse conditions” and began to take on water.

“The water depth at the scene is over 1,000 metres, making it extremely difficult to carry out salvage works,” it added as the Hong Kong’s Jumbo Floating Restaurant sinking.

On a Thursday night, Hong Kong’s Marine Department put out a statement saying it had only learnt of the incident from the media reports, and had immediately requested a report from the company.

The department said that the report was delivered on Thursday, saying the restaurant had overturned but that “at present, both Jumbo and the tugboat are still in the waters off Xisha* islands,”

Hours later, a spokesman contacted a journalist representing the restaurant who said the company had kept using the word “capsized” not “sank”. Jumbo Floating Restaurant sinking: Hong Kong.

Asked directly if the boat had sunk, he said again the statement had said “capsized”, and did not explain why it had referred to the depth of the water when mentioning salvage.

The South China Morning Post reported a similar conversation with a spokeswoman for the company, in which they insisted the boat had “capsized”, not “sank”, but refused to clarify whether it was still afloat.

The newspaper said it had been told by the Marine Department that the company might have breached local regulations if it had not notified the authorities of a sinking incident within 24 hours.

Widespread reporting in both local and international media at the beginning of the week that Jumbo had sunk was not contradicted by the company.

AFP has requested a formal statement from Aberdeen Restaurant Enterprises on the status of Jumbo, as well as a detailed explanation of what happened.

The company previously said marine engineers had been hired to inspect the floating restaurant and install hoardings on the vessel before the trip, and that “all relevant approvals” had been obtained.

The tourist attraction closed in March 2020, citing the COVID-19 pandemic as the final straw after almost a decade of financial woes.

Operator Melco International Development said last month the business had not been profitable since 2013 and cumulative losses had exceeded HK$100 million ($12.7 million).

It was still costing millions in maintenance fees every year and around a dozen businesses and organisations had declined an invitation to take it over at no charge, Melco added.

It announced last month that ahead of its licence expiration in June, Jumbo would leave Hong Kong and await a new operator at an undisclosed location.

The restaurant set off shortly before noon last Tuesday from the southern Hong Kong Island typhoon shelter where it had sat for nearly half a century.

Opened in 1976 by the late casino tycoon Stanley Ho, in its glory days it embodied the height of luxury, reportedly costing more than HK$30 million to build.

Designed like a Chinese imperial palace and once considered a must-see landmark, the restaurant drew visitors from Queen Elizabeth II to Tom Cruise.

Previous articleBoris Johnson suffers second by-election defeat
Next article10% ‘super-tax’ imposed on large-scale industries

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here