Sunday, October 13, 2024

RNZAF crew find missing fishing crews

A Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) P-3K2 Orion crew has helped save the lives of seven Kiribati and Fijian fishers during a five-day search and rescue operation in the Pacific.

The first of the three searches began on Saturday when the Orion was deployed to Kiribati to look for a six-metre wooden fishing boat with three men aboard, which had been missing since last Wednesday.

The crew successfully located two vessels in separate searches, but unfortunately a third boat, which went missing last week, was unable to be found, NZDF said in a statement today.

NZDF had been asked by Maritime New Zealand’s Rescue Coordination Centre (RCCNZ) on behalf of the Rescue Coordination Centre Fiji – which coordinates search and rescues in this region – to send the Orion.

During Saturday afternoon, the Orion crew received a second request to search for another boat with four people aboard, also reported missing from Kiribati.

The crew located the boat on Sunday, dropping a survival pack which included an activated locator beacon, water, chocolate, a strobe light, a torch and a note with information about how the four would be rescued.

Staff at the Kiribati maritime coordination centre sent a rescue vessel, Natinteraoi, which sailed directly to the locator beacon position and rescued the four in the early hours of Monday morning. Without the locator beacon dropped by the Orion, the rescue vessel would have been unlikely to be able to find the boat in the dark, NZDF said.

After finding this boat, the Orion crew resumed the search for the first fishing boat. However, despite extensive efforts over the weekend and on Monday, they were unable to locate the vessel.

On Tuesday evening, the Orion crew received a third request to search for a vessel, a fishing boat reported overdue after departing Gau Island for Suva, Fiji on Saturday night.

On Wednesday morning they found the boat drifting in open water about 40 nautical miles to the southeast – and going away from – Kadavu Island.

The three people aboard appeared well and waved at the crew. One person on the bow was seen attempting to paddle with a makeshift oar.

With no other vessels in the vicinity, the crew dropped a pack with a beacon and radio to the survivors and Fiji Police sent a vessel to their location to take them to safety.

Survivors on a boat from Kiribati were dropped a survival pack with an activated locator beacon which pinpointed their location for rescuers.

Air Component Commander Air Commodore Shaun Sexton said those involved in the searches felt for the friends and whānau of the fishermen who had not been found.

“It’s been an incredible achievement by our crew, and search and rescue staff in New Zealand, Fiji, and Kiribati, to find two groups of survivors that were drifting in boats without power in vast areas of ocean far from land or any other vessels,” he said.

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