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Hong KongLaw and Crime

Families of Hong Kong ferry crash victims say verdict won’t bring closure

Alice Leung, who lost 23-year-old brother in Lamma ferry disaster, says she knows inquest findings will not provide all the answers

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The wreckage of the Lamma IV at the government dockyard on Stonecutters Island. Photo: Elson Li
Fiona Chow

Alice Leung Shuk-ling has spent more than a decade seeking the truth behind a ferry crash in 2012 that killed her younger brother and 38 others, and she expects a Coroner’s Court verdict due on Wednesday to be merely an ellipsis – not a full stop – in her quest.

Leung, 40, said she never expected that last year’s 44-day inquest on the Lamma IV crash would unearth all the answers the families of the deceased had demanded for years.

But she believed the inquest held a “symbolic meaning” for those who wanted to know why and how their loved ones met their tragic end.

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The Lamma IV was struck by the Sea Smooth catamaran while carrying 124 HK Electric employees and their relatives to watch the National Day fireworks over Victoria Harbour on October 1, 2012.

The coroner is expected to hand down a verdict on the cause of the tragedy on Wednesday, nearly 13 years after a commission of inquiry on the collision submitted a report to the government in April 2013.

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The government had also conducted internal investigations, while separate police inquiries resulted in the prosecution and convictions of several parties.

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