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Plea from bereaved families of lost fishermen 18.03.08

"We need to keep Malin Head Coast Guard open"

THE BEREAVED families of the two brothers who died on Friday in a fishing tragedy off Inishowen Head have hit out at plans to close Malin Head Coast Guard marine rescue centre.
Highly-experienced retired fishermen Danny McDaid, 70 and his brother Francis, who was 69, lost their lives when Francis' 29ft half-decker 'Strath Marie' got into trouble as they collected lobster pots.
Speaking to InishowenNews.com, the deceased men's brothers and sisters, wives and grown-up children made an impassioned appeal to the Government not to close Malin Head Coast Guard.
Mickey McDaid, who made the 999 call when his brothers failed to return to Bunagee Harbour in Culdaff said: "At 4.55pm I dialled 999 and was put through to Malin Head Coast Guard. In two minutes they were on the ball and the search was well underway in no time," said Mickey.
"I didn't have to explain where
Malin Head Coast Guard.
Danny and Francis were. I had to give them no readings - they knew exactly where I was talking about. What hope would I have had if I had to ring a crowd down in Shannon or somewhere else?" he asked. "If Malin Head Coast Guard wasn't there, we might never have found Danny and Francis."
The families heard first-hand the quality and professionalism of the search for Danny and Francis. Those who were at home in the row of McDaid houses in 'Strath', Bunn, Glengad, were listening to their VHF radios - a staple in nearly every fisherman's house - and heard all the communications themselves. Danny's wife Ellen and Francis' wife, Betty were among them and felt compelled to listen to every twist and turn of the search mission - hoping against hope their husbands would be found alive.
The late Danny McDaid, left, and his brother Francis, from Bunn, Glengad. But the family are also highly critical of the fact that Danny and Francis were forced to fish out of Bunagee Harbour near Culdaff instead of their local pier, Portaleen, Glengad, because the crane at Portaleen has been lying broken for weeks. They say this
lost them vital time in the subsequent search for the missing men.
"If they had left from Portaleen as they should have, we would have noticed them missing a lot quicker. If they were using the home port we would have expected them back around 1pm but because they had to use Bunagee that day, we thought that's what was holding them up.
"They would have missed a lot quicker if they were using our home port. We're talking a time lapse of about three to four hours. There's a big difference between a search starting around 2pm and one starting at 5pm," added Mickey, on behalf of the families.
The families appealed for the authorities to repair the Portaleen crane as a matter of urgency. "It's too late for us now but we wouldn't want another family to go through what we're going through."
Mickey's 4.55pm call sparked a major air and sea search involving up to 100 personnel and a search area from Bunagee to Kinnago Bay. The Greencastle Coast Guard crew was joined in the four-hour search by crews from the Lough Swilly Lifeboat, Portrush Lifeboat, the Sikorsky helicopter from Sligo and local fishing vessels from Glengad and Greencastle. Sea conditions were relatively calm and the sun was shining when Danny and Francis left Bunagee that morning around 8am. As the search for them continued into the darkness, conditions had turned wet and extremely cold.
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