A British father who died on a holiday pirate ship boat trip in Turkey was allegedly covered with a towel by operators who then went on to host an on-board foam party after apologising to other customers that it would be delayed.Peter Colville, 60, was on a family holiday to Alanya, Turkey, with ten family members including his children and grandchildren, when he was found unresponsive in the water.They had all set sail on a £200 'luxury pirate' boat trip on the Legend Big Kral on July 27, complete with entertainment, DJs, snorkelling and a foam party, alongside approximately 600 other guests.But on the second swim stop by Cleopatra Beach, property maintenance boss Mr Colville went into the water and disappeared.Moments later swimmers found Peter face-up and unconscious in the water. He was brought back on deck and swimmers began administering CPR - while his family allege 'clueless' staff simply stood and watched.His daughter Nakita Colville, 27, who witnessed the ordeal, said 'unbothered and clueless' staff on board 'just stood there watching'.She said the barman declared him dead before staff covered his body and face with a towel.The coastguard arrived and her father was taken to hospital where he was confirmed dead. Peter Colville, 60, was on a family holiday to Alanya, Turkey, with ten family members including his children and grandchildren, when he died during a luxury boat tripThe family had set sail on a £200 'luxury pirate' boat trip on the Legend Big Kral on July 27, complete with entertainment, DJs, snorkelling and a foam party, alongside approximately 600 other guestsAnd while the family - including two of his grandchildren - were taken off the boat, the party continued, with crew hosting a foam party for the remaining traumatised passengers, Ms Colville claims.She then had to break the news by phone to her four brothers and their families. The admin assistant from Woking, Surrey, said: 'When my brother-in-law came back out the sea after swimming, he turned around when he realised my dad was no longer behind him.'Then we heard people yelling for help and saw my dad in the water, face up, with people trying to get him out.'One of the other guests began giving CPR while the crew members just stood there with their arms crossed.'Other guests were screaming and crying, my family was hysterical.'We were living the worst moments of our lives but as soon as we were taken off [the boat], the crew just apologised to guests because the foam party was delayed, I've been told.'My dad was the loveliest dad and grandad and he deserved to be treated with respect - and he wasn't.'We can't say it was the company's fault that he died, but maybe he could've been saved - and how it was dealt with was awful.'Ms Colville, her daughter, parents, and two sisters and their families flew to Alanya on July 20.While a fellow tourist administered CPR to Peter, the family watched on in horror as Ms Colville's mother and Peter's wife, Rosalind Colville, 53, collapsed from shock.Ms Colville said: 'My sister and I were just holding my dad's hand, screaming.'As far as we knew, or he knew, he was healthy - we have no idea what happened. He was smart - if he had been, or felt, unwell, he wouldn't have got in the water.'She estimates the boat was carrying more than 600 guests, but the Big Kral Legend's Tripadvisor page claims the boat has a capacity of 1,200. They had all set sail on a £200 'luxury pirate' boat trip on the Legend Big Kral on July 27, complete with entertainment, DJs, snorkelling and a foam party, alongside approximately 600 other guestsAccording to UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency advice, all ships should undertake a risk assessment, but 'as a general guide, vessels in regular operation carrying in excess of 100 persons' should carry a defibrillator.She said: 'Our dad was so lovely - the best dad and grandad to all his grandchildren.'I keep forgetting what happened and then it hits you all over again.'Postmortems were conducted in Turkey and the UK. Ms Colville said neither could find a cause of death so investigations are ongoing.Traumatised witnesses to the incident posted scathing Tripadvisor reviews, with one reading: 'He was laid on the deck - and then nothing. No proper procedures, no clearing the deck from onlookers, no immediate CPR. A crew member looked into his eyes and declared him dead.'Another said: 'After the lifeguard come to take the guy away we were simply told the emergency was over and they continued to play loud music and try to sell more photos.'A third added: 'The way it was handled by the crew was nothing short of horrifying. It is unsafe, unprofessional, and the crew is neither trained nor emotionally capable of handling emergencies - or tragedies.'A man died. And they carried on like it meant nothing.'Ms Colville added: 'I saw it happen but somehow it still feels like he'll walk back through the door any minute now.'All we know is that he deserved so much better than what he got on that boat.'Big Kral Pirate Boats did not respond to a request for comment.