Iranian oil tanker sinks; all 32 aboard presumed dead

epa06437801 Unidentified relatives of sailors who were onboard 'Sanchi' oil tanker that sunk off the coast of China complain to an official of the government inside the Iranian company in Tehran, Iran, 14 January 2018. Reports state Iranian oil tanker 'Sanchi' sunk eight days after a collision with a merchant ship some 296km off the coast of Shanghai. Thirty-two crewmen, including two Bangladeshis, were onboard the oil tanker carrying 136,000 tons of Iranian crude oil, that caught fire since the collision with the CF Crystal cargo ship on 06 January.  EPA-EFE/ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH

Reuters

An Iranian oil tanker has sunk after burning for more than a week following a collision on Jan. 6 in the East China Sea, Chinese state media said on Sunday, adding that large amounts of oil are burning in the surrounding waters.
Iranian officials said the remaining 29 crew members and passengers of the tanker were presumed dead. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani sent messages of condolence to the families of the crew and called for an investigation into the accident, Iranian state media reported.
The stricken tanker, called the Sanchi, which had been adrift and on fire following the accident with the freighter CF Crystal, had “suddenly ignited” around noon, China Central Television (CCTV) said.
“Currently it has already sunk,” CCTV said, citing the Shanghai maritime search and rescue centre. It showed video of a tower of billowing black smoke that it said reached as high as 1,000 metres, and flames on the surface of the water. The ship sank before 5 p.m. (0900 GMT), the broadcaster said.
China’s State Oceanic Administration said that because the hull of the ship had detonated, a large amount of oil in surrounding waters was on fire, according to the official Xinhua news agency.
The Administration said it would expand the scope of its monitoring and “quickly ascertain the spread and drift of overflowing oil” from the wrecked ship.
A Chinese salvage team on Saturday recovered two bodies from the tanker. Another body, presumed to be one of the Sanchi’s sailors, was found on Monday and brought to Shanghai for identification. The Sanchi’s crew consisted of 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi earlier told his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif by telephone that “as long as there is 1 percent of hope, China will continue to make 100 percent effort” to rescue and recover the crew.

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