200202

Page 1

Options

News FEBRUARY 2002

£1.00

Ark

100 years of caring QARNNS centenary supplement inside

gets

a big

>vT

lift-

centre

pages

Nailed to the deck - p4

Survey ship rescues refugees from sinking fishing vessel

HUNDR BY ILICON

SAILORS from veteran survey ship HMS Beagle saved the lives of hundreds of hysterical refugees when their overcrowded boat broke down and started to sink in stormy Mediterranean seas.

Beagle, a coastal survey vessel which was on her way home to Devonport after her final deployment, responded to a midnight Mayday call from the leaky refugee ship, crammed with 240 people, drifting with no engines in force eight winds 30 miles south of Crete. The overcrowded 40-metre been about 500 tons. It was flounvessel, which the refugees said dering, beam on to the sea, force had sailed from Turkey and eight, taking on water from a split was heading for Italy, was wal- seam. "When we arrived it was maylowing beam-on to the high hem. It was the middle of the seas and leaking in several night. Everyone was screaming. places. Even the people on board didn't A boarding team of three - Lt Cdr Mike O'Sullivan, POM George Hawksby and MEM John Burgess - from Beagle took the ship's sea-boat to climb aboard the refugee vessel, the Alypin Captain, a risky venture in itself. Party leader Lt Cdr O'Sullivan, the Executive Officer (XO) of HMS Beagle, said: "The transfer across on to the vessel was hairy, to say the least - the swell was around four metres. "They were big seas for a seaboat, and just launching and recovering it was extremely difficult. Our blokes did a very good job there. "It was certainly too risky to try putting civilians into boats. "The refugee boat looked a bit like a rig support vessel or fishing boat, with a flat deck aft and a whcelhousc for'ard. It must have

• HMS Beagle on survey work in the Middle East. Inset: the refugee ship Alypin Captain.

speak the same language - it was a very mixed bag of people. "It was just a matter of calming them down, letting them know they would be fine. There were about 40 women and quite a lot of children -about 33, with the youngest a babe in arms of about 2i/2 months. "A couple of people spoke fairly broken English - but they didn't necessarily speak the same language as whoever else was on board. There must have been at least four or five groups of nationalities on board. "And I think the fact that the crew had abandoned them was playing heavily on their minds." The captain and crew were nowhere to be seen, having cither taken a boat and made a run for it when trouble struck, or hiding • Turn to page 3

THUNDERER SPEAKS OUT - RADIO CHALLENGE FOR RN ENGINEERS, p29


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
200202 by Navy News - Issuu