On 20 December 1987, a routine overnight ferry crossing in the Philippines became the deadliest peacetime maritime disaster in history.
More than 4,000 passengers boarded the Do a Paz, many unrecorded, many travelling home for Christmas. Hours later, in the darkness of the Tablas Strait, the ferry collided with the oil tanker MT Vector. Within minutes, the sea itself was on fire.
What followed was not just a shipwreck, but a systemic failure on an unimaginable scale.
This gripping, deeply researched account reconstructs the full tragedy:
The overcrowded ferry that sailed beyond safe limitsThe tanker that should never have been in those watersThe collision that turned the ocean into an infernoThe desperate fight for survival in burning seasThe thousands who were never properly countedBut this is more than a disaster story.
It is a powerful examination of how systems fail, how warnings are ignored, and how ordinary people bear the cost when safety becomes routine compromise.
Written in a clear, compelling narrative style, DO A PAZ is a haunting and unforgettable account of one of the worst maritime tragedies ever recorded.