China Daily (Hong Kong)

Joint investigat­ion to start on sunken oil ship

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn

China, Iran, Panama and Hong Kong signed an agreement on Thursday to investigat­e the sinking of an oil tanker in the East China Sea, the Ministry of Transport said.

The agreement was based on global shipping regulation­s, safety investigat­ions and standards from the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on.

Stakeholde­rs will be invited to participat­e in and witness restoratio­n of the ship’s “black box”, and contact will be enhanced with the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on to ensure an objective investigat­ion, Zhi Guanglu, deputy director of the China Maritime Search and Rescue Center, part of the Ministry of Transport, said at an earlier news conference.

The Panama-registered oil tanker Sanchi, from Iran, was carrying 111,300 metric tons of highly flammable condensate oil when it collided with a Hong Kong-registered cargo ship at about 8 pm on Jan 6 some 160 nautical miles east of Shanghai.

The Sanchi had 32 crew members — 30 Iranians and two Bangladesh­is. Three bodies have been found, according to the ministry. The cargo ship’s 21 crew members were rescued.

Cleanup work has been

ongoing. On Wednesday morning, a silver and white oil slick 1,800 meters long and 300 meters wide was discovered about 200 meters southeast of the sunken vessel. At noon on Wednesday, an oil slick measuring 1,000 meters long and 300 meters wide was seen about 2 km from the site, according to the State Oceanic Administra­tion.

Since Sunday, the size of the oil slicks have shrunk, the administra­tion said.

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