In an earlier statement, Charlotte Golunski revealed that she had raised her infant above the seas in order to save her life after the superyacht she was on sank near Sicily. Now, a physician who treated her has revealed to Sky News that she had been sleeping on the deck with her kid when the storm struck.
When the storm struck, the British mother, who claims to have cradled her young daughter above the waters as the yacht sank in Sicily, was asleep on deck, according to an Italian physician. The mother claims that she was able to do this because she was sleeping on deck.
During the early hours of Monday morning, a tornado struck the Bayesian, resulting in the death of one individual and the disappearance of six others. There were a total of 22 passengers on board the yacht, and Charlotte Golunski served as one of them.
In an interview with the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, Ms. Golunski, who is 35 years old and survived together with 14 other individuals, stated that she held her daughter Sofia “afloat with all [her] strength.” Ms. Golunski is one of the survivors.
The person in charge of pediatric care at the Di Cristina Children’s Hospital in Palermo has reported that Ms. Golunski was not present with her spouse during the storm. The staff members at the hospital provided these details.
“She said that she was sleeping with the child on deck while her husband was a little further away in another part of the boat, and she felt the oscillations of the ship,” Dr. Cipolla explained to reporters.
Within a short period of time, she found herself in the water, and the darkness had descended upon her in an instant. She stated that she made an effort to maintain her hold on the youngster, but she was unable to do so for a period of three seconds.
“She then managed to catch her in the water.”
Despite the fact that she and her partner, James Emsley, who is also the father of her kid, were recovered with only a few bruises, Ms. Golunski expressed her “very sad” feelings for those who were still missing.
While Mr. Emsley was receiving treatment at a different hospital, the two of them “hugged and comforted each other” when they were reunited, but they also “cried” for the people who had been left behind.
“The young girl was crying, she was very disoriented, she looked around, and her mother was very sad and worried, especially for her husband, who was in another hospital,” Dr. Cipolla said, adding that the infant was unharmed. “The little girl was crying; she was very disoriented, She looked around.”
It was important to her to find out if everything was all right, and she enquired about the people who had gone missing because no one knew what had happened to them.
The woman was crying. She was in a state of deep depression, and she kept asking about her husband and other people.
Given that the search has entered a “critical” twenty-four hours, divers have only ten minutes for each swim, which is made even more difficult by the fact that the interior of the yacht is narrow.
The death of Recaldo Thomas, a Canadian-Antiguan native who served as the ship’s chef, has been verified.