The Citizen (KZN)

The Myanmar ‘water brothers’

MISSION TO SALVAGE SUNKEN SHIPS USING TIDES – AND POWER OF THE MOON ‘The work is slow and dangerous but addictive.’

- Yangon

Diving into the darkness of the Yangon River, Than Nyunt starts another murky sortie in his monthslong mission to salvage a sunken ship using the power of the moon.

His target is a 53m-long cargo vessel resting on the silty riverbed in Myanmar’s commercial hub, whose steel carcass will fetch a tidy sum as scrap.

A hose running from his mask up to an oxygen pump on the boat is his lifeline and only means of communicat­ion – one tug on it from a colleague means “come up quickly”.

He stays in the dark depths for up to three hours at a time, attaching cables to the wreck.

The cables run up to the team’s boat on the surface, and then to shore. When it rises on the next tide, it will drag the shipwreck

a few metres along the bed. The work is slow and dangerous but addictive, said Than Nyunt.

He says he has salvaged about 40 ships, from cargo boats to passenger ferries, since he started diving over four decades ago.

The team’s current shipwreck – the Mya Nadi (Emerald River) – is an old friend for Than Nyunt.

He salvaged the vessel in 1981

for its owner, who fitted it with a new engine and set it back to work. Around eight years ago it sank again.

There are between 20 and 30 wrecks on the bed of the Yangon, according to Than Nyunt.

During the British colonial era, the water thronged with ships taking away teak wood and rice from the hinterland­s and bringing

in workers from abroad.

In World War II, fierce fighting between Japan and Allied forces sent many vessels to the riverbed.

Cyclone Nargis, which devastated Myanmar’s Irrawaddy Delta in 2008, killing at least 138 000 people, sent more to the bottom. It left the riverbed a rich, if risky, hunting ground for salvagers.

Wrapping a metal chain around his body to weigh himself down, Thet Oo prepares for a shift unclogging silt from the “Emerald River”.

Working in the darkness, as much as 25m down and buffeted by strong currents is risky, he says.

“My life is in the hands of the man holding the oxygen pipe... If something happens to the oxygen machine, I can only know if he gives a signal to me.”

That signal is a tug on the oxygen tube, warning the diver to come up.

“However much we argue on the boat, we have to act like brothers when we are under the water,” said Than Nyunt.

Pulling the wrecks using the tidal surges of the river is organic, but plodding, and requires much patience.

In the last stage of the salvage, the team fix tyres and sandbags to the wreck to anchor it in place.

Another team then moves in to dismember the wreck, working with blowtorche­s in knee-deep water. A scrap dealer will buy the metal and melt it down to be used again. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? RISKY. A man swimming after a dive to recover a sunken ship in the Yangon River in Yangon.
Picture: AFP RISKY. A man swimming after a dive to recover a sunken ship in the Yangon River in Yangon.

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