Berliner Boersenzeitung - Six dead as Thai navy continues search for missing sailors

EUR -
AED 3.883499
AFN 71.615398
ALL 97.964948
AMD 408.53216
ANG 1.896427
AOA 964.805939
ARS 1055.741158
AUD 1.626247
AWG 1.900538
AZN 1.797142
BAM 1.952131
BBD 2.124597
BDT 125.743664
BGN 1.953948
BHD 0.398522
BIF 3107.588652
BMD 1.057323
BND 1.414655
BOB 7.271333
BRL 6.114209
BSD 1.052212
BTN 88.790617
BWP 14.355882
BYN 3.443129
BYR 20723.52596
BZD 2.121004
CAD 1.482456
CDF 3034.516057
CHF 0.934045
CLF 0.037278
CLP 1028.616599
CNY 7.65576
CNH 7.657924
COP 4649.048145
CRC 535.892785
CUC 1.057323
CUP 28.019053
CVE 110.058145
CZK 25.289043
DJF 187.376937
DKK 7.459422
DOP 63.400838
DZD 141.165268
EGP 52.331753
ERN 15.859841
ETB 130.25768
FJD 2.399807
FKP 0.834563
GBP 0.835327
GEL 2.881216
GGP 0.834563
GHS 16.783455
GIP 0.834563
GMD 75.070046
GNF 9067.9567
GTQ 8.12972
GYD 220.146233
HKD 8.227494
HNL 26.580043
HRK 7.542157
HTG 138.230195
HUF 406.433817
IDR 16751.745904
ILS 3.945331
IMP 0.834563
INR 89.24983
IQD 1378.496068
IRR 44505.358261
ISK 144.525419
JEP 0.834563
JMD 167.007687
JOD 0.749961
JPY 162.756874
KES 136.658711
KGS 91.45846
KHR 4252.008315
KMF 491.390569
KPW 951.590077
KRW 1474.473563
KWD 0.325063
KYD 0.876844
KZT 525.033196
LAK 23117.550371
LBP 94229.894127
LKR 306.573792
LRD 193.087091
LSL 19.057082
LTL 3.121999
LVL 0.639564
LYD 5.139316
MAD 10.535598
MDL 19.120064
MGA 4918.708725
MKD 61.55379
MMK 3434.143058
MNT 3592.782658
MOP 8.437142
MRU 41.954147
MUR 48.932955
MVR 16.346446
MWK 1824.670517
MXN 21.415385
MYR 4.725157
MZN 67.589326
NAD 19.057082
NGN 1763.392855
NIO 38.727212
NOK 11.651094
NPR 142.064988
NZD 1.796457
OMR 0.407084
PAB 1.052222
PEN 3.999683
PGK 4.233044
PHP 62.203409
PKR 292.315027
PLN 4.32798
PYG 8201.546341
QAR 3.837587
RON 4.977555
RSD 117.016009
RUB 106.26298
RWF 1445.496848
SAR 3.969163
SBD 8.849283
SCR 14.400772
SDG 635.976973
SEK 11.569652
SGD 1.416019
SHP 0.834563
SLE 23.948434
SLL 22171.534478
SOS 601.375398
SRD 37.434533
STD 21884.446262
SVC 9.207607
SYP 2656.554987
SZL 19.050015
THB 36.556911
TJS 11.196057
TMT 3.70063
TND 3.325849
TOP 2.476357
TRY 36.586719
TTD 7.143574
TWD 34.253349
TZS 2806.115567
UAH 43.578981
UGX 3863.738072
USD 1.057323
UYU 45.125187
UZS 13481.661105
VES 47.877573
VND 26855.997928
VUV 125.527482
WST 2.951613
XAF 654.723346
XAG 0.033674
XAU 0.000403
XCD 2.857468
XDR 0.800488
XOF 654.720256
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.172394
ZAR 19.079304
ZMK 9517.174653
ZMW 29.016326
ZWL 340.457495
  • CMSC

    0.0540

    24.624

    +0.22%

  • RIO

    1.1400

    62.12

    +1.84%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    13.2

    -0.23%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    36.68

    +0.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    24.39

    -0.21%

  • BCC

    1.4500

    141.54

    +1.02%

  • BP

    0.4400

    29.42

    +1.5%

  • BCE

    0.4100

    27.23

    +1.51%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    62.9

    +0.24%

  • GSK

    0.3400

    33.69

    +1.01%

  • RBGPF

    59.7500

    59.75

    +100%

  • AZN

    0.1600

    63.39

    +0.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.93

    +1.15%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    13.23

    +0.98%

  • RELX

    0.5900

    45.04

    +1.31%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    8.92

    +1.68%

Six dead as Thai navy continues search for missing sailors
Six dead as Thai navy continues search for missing sailors / Photo: Lillian SUWANRUMPHA - AFP

Six dead as Thai navy continues search for missing sailors

Six bodies have been found and one survivor was rescued Tuesday, after the sinking of a naval vessel two days ago in the Gulf of Thailand, the Thai navy said.

Text size:

Seventy-six sailors from the HTMS Sukhothai have been hauled from the sea after the vessel went down late Sunday roughly 37 kilometres (22 miles) off the country's southeastern coast.

There were 23 personnel still missing, a navy spokesperson said.

Helicopters, two planes, and four ships -- the HTMS Kraburi, HTMS Angthong, HTMS Naresuan and HTMS Bhumibol Adulyadej -- continued searching for survivors on Tuesday.

The bodies of four men were recovered, commander-in-chief of the Royal Thai Navy Choengchai Chomchoengpaet told a press conference in Bangkok.

The navy later revised the toll upwards to six dead.

"We will keep going until the mission is complete and we bring our people back," Choengchai said.

A helicopter transported the deceased to a naval pier late on Tuesday night, where a fleet of ambulances waited to take them to a local hospital for autopsies.

The Sukhothai was carrying extra personnel as it was joining an anniversary celebration of the navy's founder, said Choengchai, admitting that there were insufficient life jackets onboard.

"Having a life vest doesn't mean you won't die," he said.

Admiral Chonlathis Navanugraha called the incident "one of the most severe tragedies" in the navy's history.

- Waiting for news -

At a pier in Prachuap Khiri Khan province, anxious families of those missing gathered.

Earlier, they were buoyed by news that Chananyu Gansriya, 23, had been pulled from the water.

Siri Esa, the mother of 21-year-old Saharat Esa who was on board, had a smile on her face when she heard about the latest rescue.

"I also have faith in my son. This is good news," she said.

But Tuesday's waves were still high, navy spokesperson Admiral Pogkrong Montradpalin said, noting the search area had grown and was focusing "on the area near shores, according to the currents and the wind".

Some of those rescued "suffered from broken bones in the upper arm and fingers", Wara Selwattanakul, a doctor with the provincial health department, said.

Phongsri Suksawat, 50, said she hoped that her 22-year-old son Chirawat Toophorm would come home.

"I thought it would be fine and nothing bad would happen from the storm," she said, adding that before her youngest son went on the ship he asked her to take care of his wife.

"I would like to hug him."

- Electrical fault -

The vessel -- a corvette, the smallest type of military warship -- ran into trouble after its electronics system was damaged.

"Crews pumped out the water, but it flowed in quickly, leaving the ship heeling at a 60-degree angle," commander-in-chief Choengchai said at a Bangkok press conference.

While other ships approached to help, he said, the Sukhothai's rear lifted into the air and the ship sank 40 metres down.

When conditions improve, a diving team will inspect the sunken ship, he said, adding that there would be an investigation into the incident.

A warning from the Thai meteorological office remained in place Tuesday, with strong winds causing rough conditions in the Gulf of Thailand. Seafarers were cautioned to be careful, and small boats were advised to stay ashore.

The HTMS Sukhothai was commissioned in 1987 and was built in the United States by the now-defunct Tacoma Boatbuilding Company, according to the US Naval Institute.

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)