Search near Saipan continues for 5 missing crew

Summary

Coast Guard-led crews continued searching near Saipan for five missing mariners after a cargo vessel capsized during Super Typhoon Sinlaku.

Why this matters

The search highlights the risks severe weather poses to maritime crews in the Pacific and the role of regional military and coast guard coordination in emergency response. It also affects Northern Mariana Islands communities still recovering from storm damage and service outages.

The search for five missing crew members from a capsized cargo vessel near Saipan entered its second week Monday, with U.S. Coast Guard crews and other agencies covering an ocean area of about 170,000 square miles.

The Mariana, a 145-foot U.S.-flagged dry cargo vessel with six crew members, reported engine failure April 15, the day Super Typhoon Sinlaku struck the Northern Mariana Islands. A Coast Guard search plane found the vessel overturned April 18 off Saipan.

The typhoon passed about 100 miles from Guam and made landfall April 15 on Tinian with maximum sustained winds of 145 mph and heavy rain.

Five crew members and an orange life raft remained missing after more than 85 hours of searching, according to Sunday and Monday releases from U.S. Coast Guard District Oceania and U.S. Coast Guard Forces Micronesia/Sector Guam.

Search crews included Coast Guard personnel from Hawaii and Guam, the cutters Frederick Hatch and Oliver Henry, Air Force units including the 31st Rescue Squadron and the 36th Airlift Squadron from Yokota Air Base, and a U.S. Navy P-8A Poseidon from Task Force 72 at Misawa Air Base.

The Japan Coast Guard sent a Gulfstream V jet and the patrol vessel Akitsushima, and New Zealand’s air force provided a P-8A Poseidon, according to Coast Guard Forces Micronesia/Sector Guam.

The Coast Guard asked anyone with information that could assist the search to contact VHF-FM Channel 16 or the Joint Rescue Coordination Center Honolulu at 1-800-331-6176.

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