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Tug boats move the capsized dredger to an area near Pulau Senang off Singapore. Photo: AFP

Two dead, Chinese crew members missing, after boat collides with oil tanker off Singapore

Seven other Chinese sailors were rescued from the Dominican-registered dredger

Singapore

Divers Wednesday recovered the bodies of two seamen who went missing after their dredger collided with a tanker off Singapore and rescuers were hunting for three still missing.

The accident around the busy Singapore Strait occurred just weeks after a deadly collision involving a US warship in the same area.

After the latest collision in the early hours, the Dominican-registered dredger JBB De Rong 19 capsized, leaving four Chinese members of crew and one Malaysian missing. Seven other sailors were rescued.

A major rescue effort was launched involving almost 30 boats from Singapore and neighbouring Indonesia, and five Singapore Air Force aircraft.

Singapore’s Maritime and Port Authority, which is leading the rescue effort, said in a statement that “divers have recovered two bodies out of the five missing crew”, and the search for those still missing was continuing.

They did not disclose the nationalities of the dead.

The Indonesian-registered tanker Kartika Segara sustained damage to its front section but was stable and none of its crew members were hurt, the port authority said.

The collision occurred about 3 kilometres from Sisters’ Island. The dredger was transiting in a westbound shipping lane as it was entering Singapore, while the tanker was joining an eastbound lane to depart when they collided at 12:40am local time, the authority said.

On August 21, the destroyer USS John S. McCain collided with a tanker near the Singapore Strait, tearing a gaping hole in the ship’s hull, and flooding it with water.

Ten US sailors were found dead inside flooded compartments after the collision, the latest accident involving an American warship in Asian waters.

The waters around Singapore are some of the busiest in the world, with huge numbers of cargo vessels plying the trade routes between Asia and Europe.

Additional reporting by Associated Press

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Hunt goes on after two bodies found from collision
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