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Rescue work ongoing for missing N Korea seamen
DALIAN—More Chinese rescue
ships and helicopters have been mobilized to search for 17 missing
seamen after a cargo ship sank off northeast China, but little progress
has been achieved so far, local maritime sources said.
Three rescue vessels, two helicopters and a fixed-wing aircraft from the
Beihai Rescue Bureau under the Ministry of Communications, are searching
a wider area, said the Dalian Maritime Rescue Center. The “Ryong Ak
San”, belonging to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s fishery
authorities, sank near Laotiekou, Lushunkou District of Dalian, Liaoning
Province on Tuesday afternoon. It was on its way to the Jingtang Port in
north China’s Tianjin from the DPRK’s western port city of Haeju with
2,900 tons of ore and 25 crew members aboard when it sank, the center
said. The vessel’s loading capacity is 3,000 tons, the center said.
Eight seamen were rescued Tuesday, but 17 others were missing. “All the
eight rescued seamen are in good shape,” said Guo Zirui, vice director
of the Liaoning Provincial Maritime Bureau. The eight now stay in a
hotel of Dalian. Five other merchant ships passing by the site were also
asked to join the search, according to the bureau.
Vessels from a Chinese navy base in Dalian also joined the search. “The
search and rescue work is extremely difficult in the high winds, but we
will do our best,” said Guo. He said the missing men probably had little
chance of survival beyond Wednesday in the freezing waters and high
seas.
The Dalian maritime rescue center received a report from another vessel,
the “Guangyuan”, at 3:08 p.m. Tuesday, saying a ship had suddenly sunk
one nautical mile ahead of it. “An emergency operation was immediately
launched to search for the crew of the ship,” said He Jianzhong,
director of the center. A helicopter from the Beihai No. 1 Air Rescue
Squad in Dalian and rescue vessels from the Beihai Rescue Bureau were at
the site immediately after the report, said He, also vice mayor of
Dalian.
Minister of Communications Li Shenglin has instructed rescue workers to
make every effort to search for the missing seamen. Contact with the
DPRK via diplomatic channels is also underway. An initial investigation
showed the bow of the vessel had suddenly tilted, according to the
Dalian Maritime Rescue Center. A possible inflow of water plus winds of
70 kilometers per hour might have led to the sinking, according to the
investigation.
But the exact cause of the accident still depends on a thorough
investigation by maritime authorities, the center said. A plan to
salvage the ship is also under discussion, according to the Liaoning
Provincial Maritime Bureau.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |