A Panamanian freighter and a Chinese fishing boat sunk within
hours of each other in rough seas off eastern China, killing four
sailors and leaving 55 missing, emergency officials reported
yesterday.
Rescuers continued their search late yesterday for 31 sailors
who were on the foreign-registered ship when it ran into rocks and
sank near
Fujian Province late Thursday night.
Two sailors were pulled from the sea alive by the Donghai Rescue
Bureau, and four bodies were recovered, according to officials at
the
Shanghai-based operation.
The Panama-registered ship, the Heng Da 1, ran aground shortly
before midnight Thursday, and the vessel quickly broke up and sank,
rescuers said.
According to one survivors, electrician He Jinxiang, the
freighter was carrying seafood to Indonesia.
"I clung tightly to two other crewmates after we were thrown
into the sea," said the
Liaoning Province native.
The three sailors were separated by strong waves, but He's life
jacket kept him afloat until he was rescued eight hours later.
A helicopter and two rescue boats were searching the sea near
Fujian Province last night for the rest of the missing crew.
In the other mishap, a Chinese fishing vessel with 27 people on
board sank in the same area early yesterday, Xinhua news agency
reported. Three sailors were rescued by another vessel, but the
others remained missing last night as high winds and heavy seas
hampered search efforts.
(Shanghai Daily February 18, 2006)