Latest: Divers Find Boat Four in Seabed 'Tomb' - Phuket Wan
Marine Police Deputy Superintendent Lieutenant Colonel Prasert Srikhoonrat
Photo by phuketwan.com
Latest: Divers Find Boat Four in Seabed 'Tomb'
By Shanya Phattrasaya
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Phuketwan Update Latest
DIVERS have found four bodies inside the wreck of the MV Dive Asia 1 on the floor of the ocean off Phuket.
Attempts will be made tomorrow to bring the bodies back to the surface.
Seven people went missing when the MV Dive Asia 1 was struck by a savage storm that overturned the vessel on Sunday night as it returned from a holiday dive trip to the Similans.
One body, that of an Austrian woman, was found floating on the surface on Tuesday morning.
First reports said that the boat had split in two when it hit the ocean floor at a depth of 71 metres. But sonar had picked up a nearby rock.
Divers today found the boat in one piece on the bottom.
At that depth, diving becomes difficult and only highly skilled professionals can undertake such a mission.
Marine Police Deputy Superintendent Lieutenant Colonel Prasert Srikhoonrat told Phuketwan today that the the bodies were found by divers about 4.10pm.
Jurgen Schenker, Diving Course Director of Dive Asia, confirmed this afternoon that the bodies had been found.
Lieutenant Colonel Prasert said that the bodies were found in the sleeping compartments of the vessel.
As with airlines, the company records who sleeps where on board.
These positional records lead police to conclude that the bodies found today are those of two Austrians and two Swiss.
Divers swam into the sleeping compartments where a missing Japanese and a Thai staffer were recorded to be staying, but could find no sign of anyone there.
The two divers involved in the search today would have paused at set levels to avoid pressure problems as they descended and surfaced.
Missing are: Yuba Hirotsuga, Japan; Klaus Konradoer, Austria; Monika Schuster, Austria; Sibylle Bucher, Switzerland, Rolf Niederberge, Switzerland; Jumpa Sorntat, Thailand.
The husband and relatives of Gabrielle Jetzinger, whose body was recovered on Tuesday, are now on Phuket and preparing for a cremation tomorrow at a Buddhist temple.
Mrs Jetzinger, 52, was a dentist. Her husband positively identified her watch and a ring today.
Marine police found the sunken vessel on Tuesday on the seabed, although at that stage, because of what they were seeing on the sonar, they believed it had broken into two pieces.
The MV Dive Asia 1 was only four-and-a-half months old, having been launched in October after sea trials. It had air-conditioning and modern facilities.
The boat left Chalong pier on March 4 for a liveaboard diving trip to the popular Similans and was due back about 2am on Monday morning. The storm struck about 11pm on Sunday.