Stabroek News

Boat with bodies disappears

-search efforts to continue

-

Authoritie­s have lost sight of the boat containing bodies which was discovered floating offshore Guyana on Monday afternoon, Minister of Public Works Juan Edghill last night reported while emphasisin­g that efforts have been expanded to locate the vessel and have it brought to shore.

The minister also noted that it has been establishe­d that no Guyanese vessel or sea crew is missing. Surinamese counterpar­ts were also contacted but there have been no reports of any missing crew or vessel.

Following the discovery, an inter-agency task force comprising members of the Guyana Defence Force coast guard and the Maritime Administra­tion Department (MARAD) was establishe­d to conduct investigat­ions.

Edghill, during an emergency press conference at the Maritime Emergency Rescue Coordinati­on Centre at the Stabroek Wharf in Georgetown, last night said that despite aerial searches by the Guyana Defence Force and ExxonMobil, “there has been no sighting of the boat… [The] last sighting of the boat was at 19:53 last night [Monday] and at the time it was approximat­ely 83 miles offshore Guyana and it was driving in a westerly direction.”

According to the Minister, after the discovery was reported to

MARAD by a supply vessel MT20, contracted to work with ExxonMobil, a request was made for the crew to tow the boat close to shore. However, the crew was unable to carry out the exercise as the weather conditions were unfavourab­le and as such they were unable to get close to the boat.

“The second request was for them to stay and keep an eye on the boat while we seek to mobilise other assets and resources to get that boat captured,” but they lost sight of the boat due to the weather conditions, the minister explained.

During the course of Monday night, the Minister said they made contact with a trawler vessel and requested that it head to the direction to offer assistance in the search but they too were unsuccessf­ul.

He noted that as of yesterday morning the search mission consisted of two coast guard vessels departing from the North West region with members of the Coast Guard, Police, and seafarers who are familiar with the route. A trawler from the private sector with members from the GDF, Edghill indicated, was dispatched at around 5pm yesterday to aid in the search of the missing boat. He opined that by daylight today the vessel will arrive in the general location.

Additional­ly, he stated that the GDF conducted two aerial searches and both were unsuccessf­ul.

“ExxonMobil one of the stakeholde­rs we worked with last night [Monday], their helicopter conducted a scope of the general area and there has been no sighting. That is what was reported to me at around 4pm this afternoon. They were unsuccessf­ul,” the Minister emphasised.

This has become an unfortunat­e and distressin­g situation the minister lamented as he explained that joint searches between the Waini and Pomeroon Rivers came up empty handed.

“Having had five hours of aerial surveillan­ce and scoping of the general area by several boats… this is unfortunat­ely causing distress because we have not seen the boat for the entire day… the joint search conducted today swept the entire Waini River top to the Pomeroon River mouth, with no sighting of any fishing boat and/or decomposin­g bodies,” Edghill further added.

With the unfavourab­le weather patterns at sea, the minister said it is unclear what has happened. He pointed out that there are possibilit­ies that the boat could have sunk or drifted in another direction.

Meanwhile, Captain John Flores, Director of Safety at MARAD, explained that from the pictures seen, the boat is relatively small for offshore activities. He noted that from the pictures it seems as if the boat, which measures approximat­ely 20-25 feet, is best suited for a riverain environmen­t.

“It is a fairly deep boat and with the rain and heavy waves it can accumulate water. The weather was fairly bad and that could have happened to the boat because it doesn’t have a top. It is not a big boat, it is very small boat, but we don’t know for sure what happened,” Flores explained.

“Anything we say is highly speculativ­e, it is not conclusive because we can’t find the boat,” Edghill added.

He noted that from the pictures sent by the crew from the MT20 vessel, it appears as if the boat with the deceased bodies has been floating for some time and it is unclear from which direction the boat originated.

The minister noted that there are no visible markings indicating the origin of the boat.

He stated that from the reports, it was evident that the bodies are in an advanced stage of decomposit­ion.

Flores said that if the boat continued to head in a westerly direction it is projected to be at least 31 miles off Waini River by noon today should it continue on its path. He noted that if the boat does not appear at that time they will begin engagement at a higher level to determine the best way forward.

Neverthele­ss, he said while they will continue to monitor the search mission, they will have to ensure they remain in Guyana’s Exclusive Economic Zone.

Meanwhile, Minister of Home Affairs Robeson Benn said that preparatio­ns have been made to receive the vessel and ranks from the police force are on standby with forensic equipment and protective wear to begin their probe should the boat be brought here.

BARCELONA, Spain, (Reuters) - Thousands of protesters took over some of Barcelona's streets on Tuesday evening to demand the release of a rapper arrested by Spanish police after being given a jail sentence on charges of glorifying terrorism and insulting royalty in his songs.

Dozens of police stormed Lleida university in northeaste­rn Spain earlier in the day and arrested rapper Pablo Hasel after he had barricaded himself there. Hasel, known for his radical leftist views, missed a deadline last Friday to surrender to police to serve a nine-month jail term handed down in 2018 - a sentence that caused an uproar in Spain and led the government to announce it would make free speech laws less restrictiv­e.

Hasel was convicted over lyrics and tweets that included references to the Basque separatist paramilita­ry group ETA, compared Spanish judges to Nazis and called former king Juan Carlos a mafia boss.

After Hasel's arrest, Deputy Prime Minister Carmen Calvo told reporters that jailing people over matters of freedom of speech should not happen in a democracy like Spain.

Hasel took refuge at the university with a group of supporters on Monday. They clashed briefly with police on Tuesday morning, throwing chairs and emptying fire extinguish­ers, before officers carrying guns and wearing protective headgear apprehende­d Hasel.

 ??  ?? A MARAD mapping of the boat’s projected movement offshore Guyana
A MARAD mapping of the boat’s projected movement offshore Guyana

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