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ANOTHER JAPANESE SHIP SINKS IN COLLISION WITH FOREIGN VESSEL

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • May 28, 2021
  • 1 min read

Three people are missing after a Japanese cargo ship sank early Friday following a collision with a foreign vessel in the Seto Inland Sea, western Japan, coast guard officials said, Kyodo News reported.

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The incident, which occurred off Ehime Prefecture and involved the 11,454-ton Japanese ship Byakko and a 2,696-ton Marshall Islands-registered chemical tanker the Ulsan Pioneer was reported at around 11:55 p.m. Thursday, the Imabari Coast Guard Office said.


The Japanese ship had 12 crewmen aboard and the missing three are male Japanese nationals -- captain Tamotsu Sato, 66, first engineer Yuki Ogawa, 27, and second engineer Takahiro Uehata, 22. The ship sank at around 2:45 a.m. Friday.


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Of the nine rescued, five were collected by a coast guard patrol vessel and four by a private container ship that was nearby, the office said.


The chemical tanker has 13 crew members -- eight from South Korea and five from Myanmar -- and no serious injuries have been reported among them.


The ship sustained significant damage to its bow but remains afloat.


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According to Prince Kaiun Co. based in Kobe, which operates the Japanese ship, the 170-meter-long Byakko left port in Kobe in western Japan at 4:30 p.m. Thursday for Kanda in Fukuoka Prefecture, southwestern Japan. It was carrying auto parts.


It is the second major collision involving a Japanese vessel this week after a fishing boat capsized off the Hokkaido coast on Wednesday after coming into contact with a Russian ship. Three crewmen on the Japanese boat were killed in the incident.



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