The Sunday Times of Malta

Japanese WWII wreck found

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Deep-sea explorers said yesterday they had located the wreck of a World War II Japanese transport ship, the Montevideo Maru, which was torpedoed off the Philippine­s, killing nearly 1,000 Australian­s aboard.

The ship – sunk on July 1, 1942, by a US submarine unaware it was carrying prisoners of war – was found at a depth of more than four kilometres, said the maritime archaeolog­y group Silentworl­d Foundation, which organised the mission with Dutch deep-sea survey firm Fugro.

The sinking of the Montevideo Maru was Australia’s worst-ever maritime disaster, killing an estimated 979 Australian citizens, including at least 850 troops.

Civilians from 13 other countries were also aboard, the foundation said, bringing the total number of prisoners killed to about 1,060.

They had been captured a few months earlier by Japanese forces in the fall of the coastal township of Rabaul in Papua New Guinea.

“At long last, the resting place of the lost souls of the Montevideo Maru has been found,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said.

“Among the 1,060 prisoners on board were 850 Australian service members – their lives cut short,” he said on social media.

“We hope today’s news brings a measure of comfort to loved ones who have kept a long vigil.”

After five years of planning, explorers began searching for the wreck on April 6 in the South China Sea, northwest of the Philippine­s’ main island of Luzon.

They made a positive sighting just 12 days later using hightech equipment, including an autonomous underwater vehicle equipped with sonar.

“When we saw those images it was the moment of a lifetime, very exciting,” Capt. Roger Turner, technical director of the expedition, said by phone from aboard the Fugro Equator survey vessel.

The ship had sections, with split into two the bow and stern lying about 500 metres apart on the seabed, he said.

“We think that she was struck by two torpedoes. The first one was what caused her to sink, the second one actually blew off a part of the accommodat­ion.”

The wreckage will remain undisturbe­d on the sea floor, where it lies at a greater depth than the Titanic, out of respect for the families of those who perished, the foundation said. No artefacts or human remains are to be removed.

“We’re very conscious that it is a grave, it is a war grave for some 1,100 people — both our Allied military and civilians but also the Japanese crew and guards,” Turner said.

“It is being treated with appropriat­e respect.”

 ?? ?? The Montevideo Maru on a screen during the search. PHOTO: HANDOUT/SILENTWORL­D FOUNDATION/AFP
The Montevideo Maru on a screen during the search. PHOTO: HANDOUT/SILENTWORL­D FOUNDATION/AFP

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