CANBERRA, Sept 6 (NNN-AAP) – Australian authorities have coordinated the rescue of three sailors, off the country’s north-east coast, after their boat was damaged by sharks.
In a statement issued from its Canberra headquarters today, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA), said, the three, two Russians and a French citizen, were on board an inflatable catamaran, sailing from Vanuatu to Australia, when it was damaged in several shark attacks.
AMSA said, the sailors activated an emergency position-indicating radio beacon (EPIRB) at 1:30 a.m. local time today, more than 800 km south-east of the city of Cairns, in the Australian state of Queensland, triggering a rescue operation.
“The vessel departed from Vanuatu and was bound for Cairns when contact was established. Both hulls of the vessel have been damaged following several shark attacks,” the statement said.
Authorities from AMSA contacted the Dugong Ace, a nearby Panamanian-flagged vehicle carrier, for assistance and dispatched a Cairns-based challenger rescue aircraft to the scene.
“Dugong Ace successfully conducted the rescue and collected three people,” the statement said, adding that, “they are due to arrive in Brisbane, tomorrow morning.”
AMSA spokesperson, Joseph Zeller, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that, the sailors were calm and well-prepared during the rescue.
“The sailors were very lucky because they had an emergency distress beacon, which enabled us to tell the most appropriate and fastest response to rescue them,” he said.– NNN-AAP