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Vietnamese coast guards vs. pirates – Conclusion: Searching for
a ‘blind’ ship
Vietnam
Coast Guard ships are seen towing the tanker
Army
medical officials take care of an injured sailor of the
Searching for a ship floating in an
immense sea without any information is no different from looking for a needle
in a haystack, but the Vietnamese marine police force could not stand still
to wait.
The Vietnamese marine police force,
officially named the Vietnam Coast Guard (VCG), faced a similar situation
late last year.
They did not give up and achieved
their target to rescue a ship in distress.
One day in October 2014, the VCG
received a piece of news that the tanker
The vessel, owned by
The VCG was then informed of this
mysterious disappearance.
The location of the
This was all the information about
the ship in distress that the VCG had in hand.
Searching for it was clearly the
task of the VCG, but taking action with that little information is like
looking for a needle in a haystack.
The VCG alerted the information
sharing center of
No more information about the
Nguyen Quang Dam, commander of the
VCG, recalled, “I received a phone call from Major General Thu [deputy commander
of the VCG], who said that the captain of the
All crew members were locked inside
a room onboard. Pirates had destroyed all the information and radar equipment
of the vessel and steered it to an unknown location to unload 1,500 metric
tons of oil onto another ship.
At 2:00 am on October 9, or six days
after the ship was hijacked, the pirates left the vessel, unlocking the crew
members and leaving it drifting at sea.
The captain, named Thang, said he
hid his mobile phone and could only contact home at the moment, Commander Dam
said.
After failing to get in touch with
the captain several times, the commander instructed
At the same time, Commander Dam sent
an SMS message to Thang, saying he could call him whenever he was able to.
At 7:00 am on October 9, Viettel
determined that the ship was nearly 30 nautical miles, or 54km, south of Ca
Mau – the southern tip of mainland
Two VCG ships, CSB 2004 and CSB
2001, were immediately ordered to leave
The
The two police ships were sailing at
a speed of 24 miles an hour in high wave conditions.
Do Van Toan, captain of one of the
police ships, recounted, “It was the most difficult mission I had ever taken
part in.
“It was the first time we had
searched for a ship without any information on its coordinates, moving
direction and speed.”
The two VCG ships decided to
separate and zigzag in an area of 30 nautical miles around the last
coordinates identified by Viettel.
It was foggy and all the crew
members of the police ships had to stand on the towers and the decks to
observe the area with binoculars.
The Vietnamese marine policemen
approached any ship with a similar appearance to the
At 8:30 am on October 9, Captain
Thang, of the ship in distress, called VCG Commander Dam, and the force
identified the exact coordinates of the ship at 1:30 pm.
It was just 26 miles west-southwest
of Hon Khoai Islet of
Within 20 minutes, the police ships
found the
Tuoi Tre News
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Chủ Nhật, 12 tháng 7, 2015
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