The Borneo Post

WWII shipwrecks off Sabah coast broken for scrap — Divers

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KUALA LUMPUR: Three World War II shipwrecks off the coast of Sabah, Malaysia — the final resting place of dozens of seamen — have almost disappeare­d, local divers say, with the finger pointing at possible scrap metal scavengers.

The Japanese cargo vessels, which went down with their crews off the coast of Sabah in 1944, had become popular dive sites, teeming with fish and coral.

But local operators say the wrecks have been reduced to rumps, stripped of valuable metals that they believe are being sold on for profit.

Mark Hedger, owner of a diving centre in Sabah and a frequent visitor to the sites, told AFP they had now almost disappeare­d.

“The Usukan and Upside Down wrecks are 98 per cent and 99 per cent gone. The Rice Bowl wreck is a heap of metal piled up into a ball,” he said, referring to the wrecks’ local names.

There are scores of WWII shipwrecks littered throughout Southeast Asia, the result of fierce naval battles between Japanese and Allied forces.

The wrecks, some of which have never been properly documented, are treated as war graves because the bodies of the crews were never recovered.

But there have been growing reports in recent years of scavengers stripping off saleable materials, with several cases reported off the coast of Indonesia.

While some scavenging is done by low-tech outfits where divers rip off chunks of metal and haul them to the surface, there are also believed to be more sophistica­ted large- scale operations using cranes and platforms.

Sabah scuba diver Monica Chin said: “We need to know who did this and must bring them to justice. All of us are concerned and we suspect that someone is stealing the parts for scrap metal.”

“We have to conserve our history. It is really very sad,” she added.

She shared a photograph with AFP given to her by local fishermen apparently showing a vessel carrying off metal from the wrecks.

AFP has been unable to verify the photo but images shared on social media showed a large vessel and crane apparently near the sites, all within a kilometre of each other and known collective­ly as the Usukan wrecks.

Abdul Nasar Abdul Hadi, director of Sabah Marine Department, told AFP that Universiti Malaysia Sabah ( UMS) was granted permission by the Sabah Marine Department and the Sabah Museum to carry out exploratio­n and salvage works at the shipwreck sites.

He said they had used a Chinese-flagged vessel and added Sabah Marine Department issued a stop-work order late January.

Sabah Tourism Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun told AFP he was due to meet with university officials today to find out what had happened.

“We will give the university an opportunit­y to explain,” he said.

Last year it was revealed that the wrecks of Dutch and British warships sunk in 1942 in Indonesian waters had vanished.

An inquiry in The Hague this week confirmed its three WWII vessels had been stripped from the seabed.

Naval warships and war graves are protected under internatio­nal law that makes the desecratio­n of such shipwrecks illegal, but Indonesia struggles to police its sprawling archipelag­o of more than 17,000 islands. — AFP

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