Search for more survivors from sunken ferry resumes in Pacific
29 January, 2018
A nearby fishing vessel has been diverted to rescue a five-metre dinghy adrift at sea in the Pacific Ocean with seven people on board, survivors from a ferry carrying 50 that was reported missing in Kiribati waters over a week ago.
WELLINGTON: The search for survivors from a ferry which sank with 50 people aboard in the remote Pacific resumed on Monday (Jan 29), with rescuers saying they remained optimistic as they comb an area larger than Italy.
A New Zealand Air Force Orion plane located seven survivors drifting in a dinghy late on Sunday after the sinking of the MV Butiraoi, which set off from the island nation of Kiribati on Jan 18.
NZDF Air Commodore Darryn Webb said a nearby fishing vessel had safely picked up the survivors and the focus had turned to finding more passengers from the stricken ferry.
"There's a thought that there could be a liferaft with other survivors on it ... we remain optimistic that we may find more survivors," he told Radio New Zealand.
Webb said rescuers were searching a "huge" 315,000 square kilometre area.
He said the Orion's crew were determining where to look by working on the assumption any liferaft would have been drifting for about a week.
"With those details it should allow the P-3 Orion to pinpoint with greater accuracy the next location to search," he said.
The Butiraoi was last heard from on Jan 18 when it left Nonouti on a 250-kilometre trip to Betio, the largest township of Kiribati's capital city, South Tarawa.
Local authorities said the 17.5-metre wooden catamaran ran aground and underwent repairs to its propeller shaft before it left Nonouti.
New Zealand sent a military aircraft to conduct sweeps of the area after being called in to help late Friday by Fiji authorities who are coordinating the search.
Kiribati, a nation of 33 atolls and reefs with a total population of about 110,000, lies some 3,460 kilometres northeast of Fiji.
Source: AFP/de
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