Bangkok Post

Top US Navy commander arrives after destroyer collision

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TOKYO: The US Navy’s top commander visited Japan yesterday to meet the grieving families of seven sailors killed in a weekend accident, as investigat­ors probe questions over the timing of the collision with a container ship.

Adm John Richardson arrived at the US naval base in Yokosuka on the outskirts of Tokyo to meet bereaved relatives and officers who served on the USS Fitzgerald.

“It’s an intimate meeting, very solemn grieving with families, so we’re not even taking photos,” Cdr Ron Flanders, press officer at the US Naval Forces in Japan, said.

The sailors, aged 19 to 37, were found in flooded sleeping berths a day after the collision tore a huge gash in the side of their guided-missile destroyer.

Their bodies were being flown back to the US yesterday morning, according to the Commander US Naval Forces Japan. “Fitzgerald 7 are headed home; just left Japan...#FITZ crew, family on hand to say goodbye,” it said on Twitter.

Japanese coast guard investigat­ors have been interviewi­ng the Filipino crew of the cargo ship ACX Crystal, and hope to directly hear accounts of sailors aboard the muchsmalle­r US destroyer.

The cargo ship’s crew — who were not injured — apparently took nearly an hour to report the collision in a busy shipping channel near the warship’s home base, a gateway to container ports in Tokyo and nearby Yokohama.

Originally, Japan’s coast guard said the crash happened at 2.20am on Saturday based on when it was reported by the Crystal’s crew. But they later told Japanese investigat­ors the incident actually happened almost an hour earlier at 1.30am.

Japanese officials are also investigat­ing why the 222m cargo ship made a sudden turn at about 1.30am, and a sharp turn after it reported the accident around 2.20am, as shown in data from the Marine Traffic website.

It was not clear why the crew waited almost an hour to report the collision or what prompted the turns.

“As to the chronologi­cal order of what happened and other details, we are still investigat­ing,” a Japanese coast guard spokesman said.

The US destroyer did not report the accident to local authoritie­s and was not obliged to, he added. The US has primary jurisdicti­on in investigat­ing accidents involving its military.

There have been around 30 ship collisions over the past decade in the area, including a 2013 incident in which six Japanese crew died.

Adm Richardson would also meet Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force and coast guard officials to express his appreciati­on for their help in the search, Kyodo News reported.

 ?? JAPAN DEFENCE MINISTRY/AP ?? An injured ‘Fitzgerald’ personnel is carried by US military personnel and Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force members in Yokosuka on Saturday.
JAPAN DEFENCE MINISTRY/AP An injured ‘Fitzgerald’ personnel is carried by US military personnel and Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force members in Yokosuka on Saturday.

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