Survivors of deadly NZ volcano eruption set to testify

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Twenty-two people, including 14 Australians, were killed when NZ’s White Island volcano erupted.
Twenty-two people, including 14 Australians, were killed when NZ’s White Island volcano erupted.

A US couple on their honeymoon who survived severe burns when New Zealand’s White Island volcano erupted, killing 22 people, are listed as the first witnesses to testify in a trial of tourism industry operators.

Prosecutors will open their case in the Auckland District Court on Tuesday on health and safety charges against six companies and directors after the December 2019 volcanic eruption at the popular tourist attraction.

Matt Urey and his wife Lauren Barham from Richmond in the US state of Virginia were listed on Monday as the first witnesses to testify.

British helicopter pilot Brian de Pauw and Australian tourist Annie Lu are also high on the witness list.

The American couple were among 47 people on White Island, the tip of an undersea volcano that is also known as Whakaari, when superheated steam erupted, leaving most of the 25 survivors with severe burns.

Of those killed, 14 were Australian, five were American, two were New Zealanders and one was from Germany.

Many people have questioned why tourists were allowed to visit the island after experts monitoring seismic activity raised the volcano’s alert level two weeks before the eruption.

Urey and Barham were among tourists who had been travelling from Australia aboard the Royal Caribbean cruise ship Ovation of the Seas.

The island’s owners, Andrew, James and Peter Buttle, directors of Whakaaari Management Ltd, are among those charged.

Three helicopter tour operators pleaded guilty last week to safety breaches and avoided the judge-only trial, which is scheduled to last 16 weeks.

Each of the organisations faces a maximum fine of $NZ1.5 million ($A1.4 million). Each individual charged faces a maximum fine of NZ$300,000 ($A279,170).

AP