The Welland Tribune

Bodies of three N.L. fishers found, one missing

- ADIL JAWAD

ST. LAWRENCE, N.L.—The body of a third fisherman was found Tuesday as search and rescue officials continued looking for a fourth man missing off the south coast of Newfoundla­nd.

Eileen Norman of St. Lawrence, N.L., who is related by marriage to three men who were on a fishing vessel that failed to return Monday evening, said the community is devastated.

“It’s a very close community. Everybody knows everybody,” Norman said by phone. “People just can’t get over it. It’s still unreal.”

The Canadian Coast Guard says the first body was recovered at the western end of the mouth of Placentia Bay, almost 40 kilometres from the coast.

Mark Gould, regional supervisor for search and rescue at the Maritime rescue subcentre in St. John’s, says it appears the 12-metre fishing vessel sank, though the exact circumstan­ces remained unclear.

He said the first man’s body and a few pieces of the boat were located early Tuesday morning.

The centre confirmed in the afternoon three bodies had been recovered. A search was continuing for the other man from the vessel out of St. Lawrence, N.L.

The spokespers­on said it appears the small vessel didn’t have an emergency position-indicating radio beacon, or EPIRG, and the search and rescue centre hadn’t received any signal from the boat.

The four men went missing after leaving from St. Lawrence early Monday to fish for crab.

KARACHI, PAKISTAN—Pakistan announced Tuesday that Airbus experts have opened a probe into last week’s plane crash that killed 97 people when an Airbus A320 went down in a crowded neighbourh­ood near the airport in the port city of Karachi.

Initial reports have said the Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines (PIA) jet crashed after an apparent engine failure. Pakistani aviation authoritie­s said Tuesday they have shared their initial findings with the visiting 11member team from the European plane maker.

The Airbus experts and engineers are also to visit the crash site, according to Abdul Hafeez, a spokespers­on for PIA. “We are providing all possible assistance to the technical experts of Airbus,” he said. Only two people on board survived the crash.

Flight PK-8303 took off from the eastern city of Lahore and crashed on Friday while trying to land at the Karachi airport, Civil Aviation Authority spokespers­on Abdul Sattar Kokhar said.

On the ground, 18 homes were damaged, but no one was killed, mainly because the local residents were gathered at nearby mosques at the time, officials had said. Eight people on the ground were injured.

So far, Pakistan has handed over 41 bodies to their families, Hafeez said, adding that DNA tests were underway to identify the remains of the other victims.

The plane made failed attempts to land at the Karachi airport before the crash. Authoritie­s found the plane’s black box and have been guarding the crash site to facilitate the probe.

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