Raja Ampat in eastern Indonesia has long been a top attraction for intrepid travellers and avid divers, home to palm-fringed islands surrounded by an underwater kaleidoscope of coral and fish.
But the 4,200-ton Caledonian Sky slammed into the reefs at low tide around Kri, one of hundreds of small islands in Raja Ampat, earlier this month after taking the tourists aboard on a bird-watching expedition.
The boat, which was carrying 102 passengers and 79 crew, became grounded on the reefs and had to be refloated by a tug boat before continuing on its journey.
There has been outrage in the local tourism industry which relies on Raja Ampat's natural wonders for its survival.
"How can this happen? Was a 12-year-old at the wheel?" Stay Raja Ampat, a website that links tourists up with homestays, said on its Facebook page.
"Anchor damage from ships like these is bad enough, but actually grounding a ship on a reef takes it to a whole new level."
Environmental group Conservation International said that the Bahamas-flagged ship had gone into an area that it should not have entered due to the unique coral reefs.
"This is a very, very big loss for us," Victor Nikijuluw, the marine programme director at Conservational International Indonesia, told AFP.
"Even when (the reefs) grow back, they will not be as pristine as they were before," he added.
Local search and rescue agency officials said they were called to help when the ship ran aground and had intended to evacuate the passengers immediately.
But the tug took numerous attempts to refloat the massive vessel, causing even more damage to the reef.
The ship's operator, Britain-based tour company Noble Caledonia, said in a statement to the Jakarta Post newspaper that it is "firmly committed to the protection of the environment and as such deeply regrets any damage caused to the reef".
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