Chinese divers have explored the sunken South Korean ship "Golden
Rose" that sank off the east China coast a week ago, but found no
trace of the crew.
Divers from the Ministry of Communications' salvage arm explored
the sunken ship Sunday afternoon and entered the cabin, a ministry
spokesman told Xinhua.
The first diver went underwater at 4:41 p.m. He touched the
ship's mast but failed to open the door of the wheelhouse due to
rapids.
A second diver swam to the sunken ship later with an underwater
video recorder. He was able to confirm that the vessel was the
"Golden Rose," and filmed the inside of the wheelhouse.
In his recording, the wheelhouse was small and noticeably
damaged. A South Korean clock reads 7:23, which experts say may not
be the time when the collision occurred considering the outside
pressure.
Another two divers followed but all of them found no traces of
the missing sailors. They tied ropes to the cabin and the
wheelhouse to facilitate the next day's search operation.
The divers will continue to search the cabin and the seabed for
signs of the missing sailors at 5 a.m. on Monday, according to the
salvage headquarters.
The "Golden Rose" -- loaded with 5,900 tons of steel --
reportedly sank at around 3:00 a.m. last Saturday off the coast
near Yantai in heavy fog after colliding with the "Jinsheng,” a
Chinese container ship operated by Shandong Lufeng Shipping Company
Ltd.
Sixteen sailors from the "Golden Rose" -- eight South Korea
nationals, seven from Myanmar, and one from Indonesia -- are
missing more than a week after the accident.
More than 300 Chinese ships and three aircraft, as well as 29
divers and a diving vessel, have been taking part in the search for
the missing sailors; China has also invited South Korea to send
rescue boats and coast guard vessels.
Searchers earlier found two life rafts, four life rings, a
wooden oar, traces of fuel oil and other debris from the "Golden
Rose," but no sign of the crew.
(Xinhua News Agency May 21, 2007)