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Vietnam
halts air search for sunken Bulk Jupiter, 16 missing sailors
The Bahamas-flagged cargo vessel Bulk Jupiter is seen in
this photo taken from vesseltracker.com
The information was released by Major General Nguyen Van Binh, deputy chief of the committee’s Secretariat and deputy head of the Rescue and Salvage Department under the Ministry of Defense. Over the past three days, search and rescue forces from the committee and the Vietnam People’s Army have mobilized dozens of ships – including fishing boats – to search for the sunken ship and the missing sailors, with the support of many foreign vessels, the official said. Immediately after receiving a report about the incident, the committee has since last Friday also deployed many planes to search for the sunken Bahamas-flagged ship and the missing sailors in a vast sea area off Vung Tau. However, except for saving one crewmember, the ship’s chef, Rojas Angelito Capindo, 43, and recovering two bodies drifting at sea, one of which was the ship’s captain, Andrin Ronel Acueza, 46, while the other was the third Officer, Dinoy Jerome Maquilang, 23, the joint rescue forces have yet to find any more sailors or signs of the sunken ship, the official said. Meanwhile, bad weather hampered the search on Monday, Pham Hien, vice president of the Vung Tau Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre, which is leading the search, told Reuters. “The weather is very bad with high waves and strong winds,” he said. The committee has therefore decided to temporarily stop the deployment of planes, Major General Binh said. Those ships that have been mobilized to search for the sunken vessel and its missing sailors over the past three days have also been ordered to resume their previous normal operations, but they are also asked to continue watching and be ready to take part in rescue and salvage activities when requested, Binh said. A crew list of the sunken ship is available here. The Bulk Jupiter was in distress about 150 nautical miles off Vung Tau while transporting 46,400 metric tons of bauxite from
Chef Rojas confirmed there
were 19 crew members on board the
missing ship, and all were Filipinos. The accident happened to the ship at
about 6:00-7:00 am on Friday morning.
He told rescuers that when the ship suddenly capsized and sank, most of the
crewmembers were inside the its holds.
“As it was carrying such a heavy load, it
could have sunken rapidly after capsizing, and this may be the reason why the
crew had not issued SOS signals,” Major General Binh commented.
The emergency signals the Vietnam Maritime Search and
Given the direction of winds and waves in the area where the ship was in
distress, if objects belonging to the ship were drifting at sea, they might
have moved to the waters of Indonesia, so Vietnamese competent agencies have
asked their Indonesian counterparts to coordinate in the search for signs of
the ship as well as the missing sailors, the official said.
On Sunday, vessel SAR 413 handed over the
role of directing rescue efforts on the scene to the Vietnam Coast Guard’s
ship 4034 and returned to Vung Tau, taking ashore the rescued chef and the
two bodies.
The two bodies will be sent to
TUOITRENEWS
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Thứ Ba, 6 tháng 1, 2015
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