The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Indonesia to salvage submarine after deadly sinking disaster

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BALI, Indonesia: Indonesia said it will salvage a submarine that sank off the coast of Bali, as grieving relatives paid their respects to the dozens of crew killed in the disaster.

Authoritie­s had yet to confirm if they would try to haul up the KRI Nanggala 402 from the seafloor, after it was spotted cracked in three pieces.

The navy yesterday said it was waiting on the arrival of two ships, including a vessel sent by China, that are equipped to handle deep-sea salvage operations.

High-powered magnets and air balloons were among the possible options, but how and when the cracked submarine would be brought to the surface was uncertain, said navy chief Yudo Margono.

“It’s hard to talk about specific timing, but I can say that as soon as help arrives, we’ll start,” he told reporters.

The submarine’s 53-strong crew are believed to still be inside the vessel, Margono said.

An underwater rescue vehicle supplied by neighbouri­ng Singapore gave visual confirmati­on that the German-built sub was lying on the sea floor more than 800 metres deep.

The eerie images were final confirmati­on that there was no hope of finding survivors.

Yesterday, the victims’ families cast flowers from a navy ship into waters where the sub went down as part of a remembranc­e ceremony.

The submarine – one of five in Indonesia’s fleet – disappeare­d last week while it was scheduled to take

It’s hard to talk about specific timing, but I can say that as soon as help arrives, we’ll start. Yudo Margono

part in live torpedo training exercises.

The crew asked for permission to dive. It lost contact shortly after.

Later, search teams spotted an oil spill where the vessel was thought to have submerged, pointing to possible fuel tank damage and a catastroph­ic accident.

The military has yet to offer an official explanatio­n for the sinking. It has said, however, that the reconditio­ned vessel was seaworthy and discounted the possibilit­y of an explosion.

The navy has said that the submarine may have suffered a blackout and left the crew unable to perform emergency measures.

Its hull would have been torn apart as it sunk to depths far below what the KRI Nanggala was built to withstand, they said.

The submarine’s former commander, Rear Admiral Muhammad Ali, has told local media that a so-called internal solitary wave could have been to blame.

The natural phenomenon occurs when different sea depths come together, creating forces that could have dragged the vessel down, he said. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Family members throw flowers into the sea during a remembranc­e ceremony for the crew of the Indonesian navy submarine KRI Nanggala on the deck of the hospital ship KRI Dr Soeharso off the coast of Bali.
— AFP photo Family members throw flowers into the sea during a remembranc­e ceremony for the crew of the Indonesian navy submarine KRI Nanggala on the deck of the hospital ship KRI Dr Soeharso off the coast of Bali.

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