New Straits Times

2 bodies found, 3 crew missing

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SINGAPORE: Divers yesterday recovered the bodies of two seamen, who went missing after their dredger collided with a tanker off Singapore. Rescuers are hunting for three others still missing.

The accident around the busy Singapore Strait occurred just weeks after a deadly collision involving a United States warship in the same area.

After the latest collision in the early hours, the Dominican-registered dredger capsized, leaving four Chinese crew members and one Malaysian missing. Seven other sailors were rescued.

A major rescue effort was underway, involving almost 30 boats from Singapore and neighbouri­ng Indonesia, and five Singapore Air Force aircraft.

According to the city state’s Maritime and Port Authority, which is leading the rescue effort, “divers have recovered two bodies out of the five missing crew”, and the search for those still missing was continuing.

They did not disclose the nationalit­ies of the dead.

The Indonesian-registered tanker sustained damage to its front section, but was stable and none of its crew members were hurt, the port authority said.

There were no reports of disruption to shipping in the Singapore Strait or an oil spill.

On Aug 21 the destroyer USS John S. McCain collided with a tanker near the Singapore Strait, tearing a gaping hole in the warship’s hull and flooding it.

Ten US sailors were found dead inside flooded compartmen­ts after the collision, the latest accident involving an American warship in Asian waters.

The waters around Singapore are some of the busiest in the world, with huge number of cargo vessels plying trade routes between Asia and Europe. AFP

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Four tug boats moving the partially submerged Dominicanr­egistered dredger after a collision with an Indonesian­registered tanker in Singapore’s territoria­l waters yesterday.
REUTERS PIC Four tug boats moving the partially submerged Dominicanr­egistered dredger after a collision with an Indonesian­registered tanker in Singapore’s territoria­l waters yesterday.

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