The Mercury News

Iranian oil tanker explodes, sinks after Jan. 6 collision

- By Amir Vahdat

TEHRAN, IRAN >> A burning Iranian oil tanker exploded and sank Sunday after more than a week listing off the coast of China, as an Iranian official acknowledg­ed there was “no hope” of missing sailors surviving the disaster.

The collision and disaster of the Sanchi, which carried 30 Iranians and two Bangladesh­is, had transfixed an Iran still reeling from days of protests and unrest that swept the country at the start of the year.

Families of the sailors wept and screamed at the headquarte­rs of the National Iranian Tanker Co. in Tehran, the private company that owns the Sanchi. Some needed to be taken by ambulance to nearby hospitals as they were so overwhelme­d by the news.

“Thirty-two people died without a funeral and without coffins! They burned to ashes while their families were wailing here!” cried out one woman who didn’t give her name. The government “has come after 10 days to sympathize with them? What sympathy are you talking about?”

State TV earlier quoted Mahmoud Rastad, the chief of Iran’s maritime agency, as saying: “There is no hope of finding survivors among the (missing) 29 members of the crew.”

President Hassan Rouhani expressed his condolence­s and called on relevant government agencies to investigat­e the tragedy and take any necessary legal measures, according to state TV. In a message, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei expressed his condolence­s and sympathy with the victims’ families, his own website, Khamenei.ir, reported Sunday. The government also announced today as a nationwide day of public mourning over the disaster.

The cause of the Jan. 6 collision between the Sanchi and the Chinese freighter CF Crystal, 160 miles off the coast of Shanghai, remains unclear. The CF Crystal had 21 crew members, all of whom were reported safe.

But the Sanchi, carrying nearly 1 million barrels of a gassy, ultra-light oil bound for South Korea, burst into flames. Chinese officials blamed poor weather for complicati­ng their rescue efforts. Thirteen ships, including one from South Korea and two from Japan, engaged in the rescue and cleanup effort Saturday, spraying foam in an effort to extinguish the fire.

But around noon Sunday, Chinese state media reported that a large explosion shook the Sanchi, its hull and superstruc­ture completely stripped of paint by the flames. The ship then sank into the sea.

The Chinese say the ship left a 3.8-square-mile area contaminat­ed with oil. However, the condensate oil the ship was carrying readily evaporates or burns off in a fire, reducing the chance of a major oil spill.

Chinese state media also said the ship’s voice data recorder, which functions like “black boxes” on aircraft, had been recovered. Three bodies have been recovered from the sea, leaving 29 crew members still unaccounte­d for.

 ?? VAHID SALEMI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Friends and colleagues of Iranian sailors, who died aboard a tanker that sank off the coast of China, weep at the headquarte­rs of National Iranian Tanker Company, in Tehran, Iran on Sunday.
VAHID SALEMI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Friends and colleagues of Iranian sailors, who died aboard a tanker that sank off the coast of China, weep at the headquarte­rs of National Iranian Tanker Company, in Tehran, Iran on Sunday.

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