Google –AFP, March 3, 2014
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| A Japan Coast Guard photo of black smoke rising from tuna fishing boat “No. 8 Kaisei-maru,” 400 kilometers south of Japan’s Kochi prefecture on March 2, 2014. (AFP Photo/Japan Coast Guard) |
Tokyo. An
Indonesian fisherman was rescued Monday floating in the Pacific, 24 hours after
his tuna fishing boat was seen engulfed by fire.
The man,
identifying himself as Simon, was rescued by another fishing boat helping in
the search for the Japanese-registered No. 8 Kaisei-maru, which was found in
flames on Sunday, about 410 kilometers south of Kochi prefecture in western
Japan, the coastguard said.
Two
Japanese and five Indonesian men were on board the vessel when it stopped
responding to radio communications early that day, according to the coast
guard.
“An Indonesian
native, who is calling himself Simon, has been found and rescued” by a boat
operating near No. 8 Kaisei-maru, a spokesman for the coastguard said. “He is
very weak, but conscious. He is not in a life-threatening condition.”
Three other
men had been found, although all were said to be in cardiac arrest. The term is
usually used in Japan by first responders before an accident victim is
certified dead by a doctor.
A coast
guard plane was transporting them to Japan, the spokesman added.
The coast
guard originally received a report from a local fisheries radio station early
Sunday that it could not contact the 19-ton vessel.
More than
four hours later, a plane spotted the burning ship, with television footage
showing the bridge was in flames. It was unclear what caused the blaze.
Searchers
returned to the area’s waters Monday but could not locate the ship, which they
said may have sunk.
The ship
left the port of Kochi on February 20 and had planned to reach another port in
nearby Wakayama prefecture on Tuesday.
Agence France-Presse

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