Thursday, March 11, 2010

This blog has moved


This blog is now located at http://forever-26.blogspot.com/.
You will be automatically redirected in 30 seconds, or you may click here.

For feed subscribers, please update your feed subscriptions to
http://forever-26.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Forever 26 Trust awarded Charitable Status

The Trustee's of the Forever 26 Trust are please to announce that the Trust has been awarded charitable status by the New Zealand Charities Commission.

Matamanoa Island Resort to possibly face criminal charges

A criminal case against the owner of a Fijian resort after the death of a Kiwi honeymooner would make history in the Pacific country.

Rebecca Stockwell, of Blenheim, died after being hit by a boat propeller as she snorkelled with her husband at Matamanoa Island on November 30, 2007.

A spokeswoman for the Director of Public Prosecutions in Fiji said the office was considering criminal charges against the company's owner.

This had never been attempted so it remained to be seen whether it was possible.

"We are of the view that it can be done. There's nothing in the law to stop us," she said." Once the police have completed their investigations, we will make a determination on whether there's sufficient evidence to charge the company."

The spokeswoman confirmed since Stockwell's death there had been another boating accident in which a male tourist suffered injuries. She believed he was also a New Zealander.

The boat driver who hit Rebecca, Tomasi Natutuvuli Tovou, pleaded guilty to manslaughter this week and was sentenced to a year in jail, suspended for two years. This means he will serve no time in prison unless he commits another crime during that period.

Rebecca's father, Mark Crawley, said while Tovou had made a mistake, it was the island's owner who the family held as primarily responsible. If simple safety measures had been followed, his daughter would be alive, Mark said. These included having a guard on the boat propeller and buoys or signs to designate safe swimming areas.

The family planned to bring a civil action against the owner and manager of Matamanoa Island, but were also hopeful of criminal charges being laid.

"The prosecution have made it clear that there's a lot of pressure now within Fiji for it to start actively looking at bringing manslaughter charges, criminal charges, against companies," he said." It's taken quite a time to ramp up because they are not used to even investigating such charges, but we believe there's international pressure from more than one government for this to happen."

With permission of the Press.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Push to lift resort safety

The family of a 26-year-old Blenheim honeymooner tragically killed a year ago in Fiji has spent the last 12 months trying to raise public awareness of lax safety measures in many exotic holiday locations. Few people appear to be taking any notice, ALEX VAN WEL of the Christchurch Press reports.

"I've just got to do as much as I can, as much as Rebecca would have expected me to do. I can't really do anything else," said Mark Crawley on the phone from the UK, his voice beginning to crack up with emotion and fatigue.

A year after the death of his daughter, Rebecca Stockwell (nee Crawley) in Fiji, the feelings of loss are clearly no less intense.

"I will be working for my little lady till the day that I die, no matter what happens. Such is life," he said.

Mark Crawley, an inventor and entrepreneur, currently divides his time between Britain, America and New Zealand.

In May he, his ex-wife and Rebecca's mother, Heather Richards, and maritime engineer John Smart (father of Sounds murder victim Ben Smart) set up Forever 26, a charitable trust aimed at improving safety awareness in Fiji.

Rebecca was killed in what first appeared to be a freak boating accident at the Matamanoa Resort in the west Fijian Mamanuca islands. On the second day of an exotic holiday she was fatally injured by the propeller of a speedboat while in a swimming area.

The 26-year-old was on honeymoon with her husband, Hayden, and died only six days after the two were married in Blenheim.

A Fijian man, 27-year-old Tomasi Natutuvuli Tovou, will go on trial for manslaughter early next year. It is alleged that he negligently drove the boat into a restricted area.

Crawley blames the death on a failure to put standard safety mechanisms in place.

"This is not about being vindictive, this is about education," he said. "A $199 propeller guard on their own in-shore craft and Rebecca almost certainly would have been alive. And a boom-buoy system that marked their own channel out, their own boating channel, which we would estimate at around $1000, and Rebecca would definitely be alive . . . categorically."

There is little doubt that Rebecca's death sent a shockwave through the Fijian tourism industry.
Josefa Qarase, a marine surveyor with the Fijian Maritime Safety Authority, told The Press it boosted an initiative to raise standards.

"There have been ongoing awareness programmes conducted with all the small boat operators, but we've stepped it up," he said.

Qarase said there had been further incidents since last year, but none of them involved loss of life.

He said he was not in a position to say whether there had been a specific effort to ensure that all resort boats were now fitted with propeller guards.

From Australia, a spokesman for the Lonely Planet guidebooks said that judging by the feedback it received on its website, Fijian resorts had not been highlighted as wanting in terms of general safety. Raphel Richards added that looking specifically at water safety in resorts around the world, the main criticisms related to diving.

"Travellers who do contact us are often concerned with the level of qualifications, maintenance of equipment and site selection for these courses," he said. "We haven't received any specific concerns regarding Fiji . . . it's usually where diving is popular."

But Mark Crawley believes that Rebecca's death shone a light on a much deeper and universal problem with travel to exotic resorts.

"We as human beings abdicate responsibility in situations like going on holiday," he said. "We have this mental thing that if you are paying $600 a night for accommodation, then therefore you must be getting value in everything."

He argues that while travel brochures routinely provide detail on meals, rooms and environment, few offer the same focus on safety.

The chief executive of New Zealand's Travel Agents Association, Paul Yeo, agreed.

"I have to admit safety standards and issues like that aren't usually top of most people's list. A lot of people don't have an interest. It's only after the fact that something goes wrong, sadly."

Yeo said price was usually the overwhelming concern, and he welcomed a re-examination of safety information in travel guides.

"It is when there are issues that these things get raised. So, I think it is great that people are raising these issues because it is essentially market-led."

With permission of the Press.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Rebecca Louise, Forever to be 26

Unfathomable! Incomprehensible!

How can one possibly try to understand the true depths and meanings of these two words?

We are taught that the Universe extends out to infinity in all directions around us, and while our minds find this an almost impossible concept to accept, we are more likely to be able to understand this physical truth than we are to understand the meaning of these two words!

One year passed of unfathomable grief and despair!

One year passed of unfathomable kindness and support from so many who loved Rebecca; some known to us and some unknown, but all so sincerely and deeply appreciated!

One year passed of incomprehensible disrespect and ignorance from just a few towards those who knew Rebecca from the day she was borne, held her in their arms as she emerged vibrantly into this world, and loved her from the bottom of their hearts and souls until she was incomprehensibly and unfathomably taken away from us all!

They say that time heals all, and for so many this will surely be the case, but when your own flesh and blood is torn from your life so senselessly, for a very lonely few it is unfathomable and incomprehensible that there ever will be a day or a time when any of this makes sense, when the world will be “right” ever again.

But whoever we are and wherever we are on this day, the 30th of November 2008, one year to the day since Rebecca was torn from our lives through sheer and utter negligence, today is for uniting together and remembering our child, our sister, our step-daughter, our granddaughter, our niece, our cousin, our colleague, our wife and for each and every single one of us, our friend.

Rebecca Louise, forever to be twenty-six years old; in our hearts, in our minds, in our memories, and for those of us who believe there will come a day when each and everyone one of us who knew and loved her will see her again, in our lives.

Wherever Rebecca is now, both of her parents hope that there is a dance floor nearby, so that one day in the future we can once again have the chance to hold her in our arms, dance with her around the floor and tell our little girl just how proud of her we are and just how much we love her; yesterday, today and tomorrow, out to the infinity that is the universe!

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Fijian faces trial over death of Kiwi honeymooner

The man charged with the manslaughter of Blenheim woman Rebecca Stockwell (nee Crawley) who was killed while on her honeymoon in Fiji will go on trial in March.

Boat labourer Tomasi Natutuvuli Tovou, 27, was the driver of the boat that allegedly hit Mrs Stockwell as she snorkelled with her husband Hayden on November 30 last year. The couple were staying at the Matamanoa Island resort.

Blenheim police detective sergeant John Hamilton said information he received from an investigator on the case in Fiji stated Tovou would appear for a pre-trial conference on February 16, with the hearing due to start on March 9.

Fiji assistant police spokesman corporal Josaia Weicavu said the boat Tuvou was driving on the day Mrs Stockwell was killed was allegedly on the wrong side of the buoys used to mark a boat lane.

The Marlborough Express Wednesday, 12 November 2008

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Forever 26 Trust

It is a sad fact that in many areas of life, perception differs greatly from reality!

This is particularly so when it comes to hotels and holiday resorts around the globe with guest access to open waters, and most particularly with young adults and families with children where the full range of facilities on offer are embraced with enthusiasm by one and all.

Typically the daily room rate is high due to the access to pearly white beaches and unspoiled reefs just waiting to be explored, and because of this, one and all automatically associate the expensive holiday with the full provision of services; including the abdication of all aspects of our health and safety to the hotel or resort who themselves are enjoying the rewards of our hard earned cash.

And therein lies the problem; in countless such hotels and resorts around the world, health and safety measures for their guests is minimal to nonexistent, and we should know, as we lost our eldest daughter Rebecca on a pearly white beach at the end of November last year in an incident that was totally and utterly preventable.

Even sadder than this is the fact that Becky is not the first person to die this way, but we seek to ensure that she is the last. The Forever 26 Trust has been formally established to try and prevent any other family ever having to bring their child home the way that we had to bring our Becky!

On the 8th of May 2008, The Forever 26 Deed of Trust was formally signed by the founding trustee’s who are Heather Richards, Becky’s mother, Mark Crawley, Becky's father and John Smart.

John is a long-standing family friend, a maritime engineer who continues to work extensively in the maritime field internationally, and is the father of Ben Smart who along with Olivia Hope disappeared in the Marlborough Sounds a decade ago.

Heather, John and I fully support the aims and goals of the Forever 26 Trust which include:
  • The mandatory requirement for propeller guards on all inshore craft owned and operated by commercial operations where the craft may operate near their own guests
  • The mandatory requirement for minimum international standard boom-buoy systems to ensure the same inshore craft of commercial operations can never encroach into approved guest swimming areas
  • A change in regulations to make it law that the number of operators of such inshore craft must be a minimum of two; one driving and one acting as lookout
  • A change in regulations to set minimum international standards for signage around such resorts, and
  • A change in regulations to set minimum international standards of medical facilities and trained staff to be available at all times.
The Forever 26 Trust also seeks to increase safety awareness through campaigning for travel brokers internationally to include health and safety as comparative information available in their brochures along with the current comparisons of food quality, room quality and the like.
The Forever 26 Trust also in part seeks to hold those accountable who through their negligence caused such a senseless death to occur.

This may seem to some a big task, but it is achievable and lives will be saved. Becky was not the first to die, but we can make her the last, and to achieve this, Heather, John and I need help; we need your help.

If you wish to discuss this further with me, please contact me on mark@forever26.com.

The Forever 26 Trust has formally applied for charitable status in New Zealand and this will be retrospective back to the 8th of May 2008. We can see no reason for this formal request to be denied, however this is a long process and the outcome will not be known for at least another 3 months.

If at any time you wish to make a donation, this can be made:
  • Directly at any National Bank in New Zealand under the name of “Forever 26”,
  • By the PayPal button on the right side of the screen, or
  • Through a funds transfer to:
  • The National Bank of New Zealand, Blenheim Branch 40 - 42 Market Street, Blenheim
  • SWIFT Code: ANZBNZ22
  • Account Name: FOREVER 26
  • Account: 06 - 0601 - 0211815 - 30
  • Sort Code (if Required separately): 06 - 0601
Any assistance will be most gratefully received. We cannot do this without your support.

From approximately 12:30 pm today New Zealand time, 3rd Jul 2008, and for approximately the next 24 hours, an interview on the TV New Zealand “Good Morning” program will be accessible through the following link:

http://tvnz.co.nz/view/tvone_minisite_index_skin/tvone_good_morning_group

Thank you for reading this, thank you to all who care for and love Rebecca, and thank you sincerely on behalf of Heather, John and myself and all of Becky’s family to those who can help us make some sense out of Becky’s death by doing our best to make sure that she is the last of our children to be brought home in this way.

With your help, we can make a difference; we can save lives; and we can bring some meaning to Rebecca’s death.