The Phnom Penh Post

Search suspended for Chinese sailor lost in Pacific

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THE US Coast Guard suspended its Pacific Ocean search for star Chinese sailor Guo Chuan, it said, after rescuers boarded his drifting yacht and confirmed he was not there but found his lifejacket.

Guo “was a profession­al mariner with a deep passion for sailing”, the Coast Guard’s Captain Robert Hendrickso­n said in a statement yesterday.

“Our deepest condolence­s go out not only to his family and friends but also to his racing team and the sailing community.”

Footage released by the US Coast Guard showed Guo’s 97-foot trimaran Qingdao China drifting across the waves hundreds of kilometres west of Hawaii, its red sail emblazoned “Peace and Sport”. Both a US Navy helicopter crew and a Coast Guard Hercules aircraft overflying the vessel had been previously been unable to contact Guo, it said.

Guo, 51, became in 2013 the first Chinese sailor to complete a non-stop solo circumnavi­gation of the globe and is by far the country’s biggest sailing star.

He set off from San Francisco on October 18 in an attempt to set a record crossing of the Pacific, but his team lost contact with him on Tuesday afternoon Beijing time. They alerted US authoritie­s, and rescuers from the USS Makin Island amphibious ship reached the Qingdao China yesterday Beijing time.

“The boat crew confirmed Chuan was not on the vessel although his life jacket remains aboard,” the Coast Guard statement said.

They lowered the mainsail and left the Qingdao China at sea, it added, saying his racing team was arranging to salvage the vessel.

Guo had previously said his greatest fear was to fall in the water, China’s official Xinhua news agency reported, citing him as saying: “I fear being separated from the ship when I am sailing solo.”

What happened to Guo remained unclear. Guo’s team said they had observed his speed slowed on Tuesday and tried to contact him, but he did not answer either satellite calls or internet communicat­ion. The US searchers had found a broken sail in the water.

Chinese fans expressed fear for the mariner, with one writing that it was “likely he was adjusting or repairing the sail when he was struck or an accident occurred and he fell”.

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