Mahina Toki, 13 months old, drowned after falling from her family's yacht in Fiji. Her parents Mark and Kiri were unable to revive her. Photo / Givealittle
Fijian police are continuing to investigate a New Zealand child’s death after she fell from a moored vessel and drowned.
The 13-month-old toddler from Great Barrier Island died despite multiple efforts to revive her after she fell from her family’s boat in Fiji.
A Fiji police spokesperson said the police investigation would consider whether “negligence” was a factor in Kiwi toddler Māhina Toki’s death.
”The investigation is still in progress and with all cases involving children, the element of negligence is investigated. We cannot pre-empt any possible charges as the investigation is still under way.”
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed the family was receiving consular assistance.
The child was believed to have been strapped into a harness on the boat’s deck and watching a movie while her parents, Mark and Kiri, were cooking dinner in the galley, the Fiji Police spokesperson said.
When they returned to the deck, they could not find Māhina and began searching for her. The toddler was found floating in the sea.
Extensive efforts were made to revive the toddler with a large number of boaties in the cove, including doctors and other medical staff, rushing to assist the family.
“By the time we could find her, it was too late,” a friend of the grieving family wrote on a Givealittle page set up to cover the cost of flights back home and funeral expenses.
It said Māhina had been tethered to the boat but “worked free” and ended up in the water.
The police spokeswoman said the family’s yacht was docked in Musket Cove, on the west side of Fiji, when the incident occurred on Friday.
The family, from Great Barrier Island, had arrived at Musket Cove in their 10-metre catamaran Kalamari on Wednesday after sailing from New Zealand.
Musket Cove Resort manager Joe Mar told the Herald there is a huge sense of shock across the island.
“The family rushed into shore to seek help and a lot of people rushed to their aid, but unfortunately couldn’t revive her,” he said.
He says the family have now moved inland to Denarau and are being supported by Fiji police.
“Māhina was a beautiful, happy, smiling child who loved the water and life on the boat,” reads the Givealittle page, which had raised over $21,000 on Sunday night.
“Her mother, Kiri, said she had eyes that looked into your soul from the [day] she was born.”
Her parents were now in the process of “picking up their lives” and heading back to New Zealand.
“To the beloved Māhina, may you forever live in peace, splashing with joy somewhere in the sea,” the family friend wrote.
Island Cruising New Zealand owner Viki Moore said a number of their participants rushed to the aid of the family and in turn spoke about how traumatising the incident was.
“They did all they could to help them,” she said.
Moore says it is common practice when sailing for people to be tethered to the boat.
“I don’t know what happened in this case, but it is very sad,” Moore said.
Moore says there are around 85 boats on their rally with between two and four people on board that annually make the trip to Fiji.