36 Still Missing Four Days After Cyclone Tauktae Sank Barge Off Mumbai
Cyclone Tauktae: The Navy is leading a massive, round-the-clock rescue effort that includes several of its ships, P-81 reconnaissance aircraft and Sea King helicopters
All India Edited by Chandrashekar Srinivasan (with inputs from PTI)Updated: May 20, 2021 9:36 am IST
Mumbai/New Delhi:
36 ONGC workers are still missing four days after a barge that was carrying 261 people sank 35 nautical miles off the Mumbai coast as Cyclone Tauktae battered India’s west coast.
The Navy is leading a massive, round-the-clock rescue effort that includes several of its ships, P-81 reconnaissance aircraft and Sea King helicopters, as well as Coast Guard and ONGC vessels, to detect survivors from the sunken barge and other vessels stranded or affected by the storm.
So far 188 people have been rescued and 37 bodies recovered from the wreck of barge P-305, which was one of three – the others were Gal Constructor and Support Station-3 – deployed by engineering firm Afcons for its ONGC (Oil and Natural Gas Corporation) contract.
All 137 people on Gal Constructor, which ran aground during the storm, were rescued Tuesday.
The 201 on board Support-Station 3, which was drifting northwest in the Mumbai High oilfield, are believed to be safe; the barge has been located by INS Talwar and is now being towed back to Mumbai harbour by ONGC support vehicles, according to news agency PTI.
The Directorate General of Shipping has ordered an investigation into the deaths. Mumbai Police has also announced a probe – into barge P-305 remaining in the area despite storm warnings.
An ADR (accidental death report) was registered Wednesday in connection with the deaths.
Barge P-305 sank 35 nautical miles off the Mumbai coast in heavy winds and rain during Cyclone Tauktae
INS Kochi and INS Kolkata on Wednesday evening brought back barge P-305 survivors and dead, as well as two people rescued from tugboat Varaprada. Both ships sailed back out immediately to rejoin rescue efforts, alongside INS Beas, INS Betwa, INS Teg and other vessels.
ONGC’s oil driller Sagar Bhushan – which had 101 people on board when it lost its anchors in the storm and began to drift north, has also been located and is being towed home, PTI said.
On Thursday morning the Coast Guard said another missing tug – Sangeeta, with a crew of 10 – had been located about 10 nautical miles west of Maharashtra’s Tarapur. The Coast Guard found the ship and has provided food, water and medical support to the crew, while it is being towed back.
The Navy launched a rescue operation immediately after being notified of the barges being adrift
Another rescue effort involves Greatship Aditi – an offshore supply/tug that is struggling 15-20 nautical miles southeast off Gujarat’s Pipavav.
INS Talwar – the Navy’s ‘on scene coordinator’ off the Gujarat coast – is in the area, officials said.
Nightmarish stories are emerging of people battling the elements to stay afloat as the Navy races to find them. Manoj Gite, 19, one of those on board barge P-305, thanked the Navy for saving their lives.
“It is because of the Navy that we all are alive and safe today, otherwise we don’t know what would have happened to us,” he told PTI, fighting back tears.
Vikas Kumar, who was also injured when the barge was sinking, said, “I jumped in the sea when the barge was sinking and injured my leg badly. I would have died if not for the Navy.”
Tauktae – the most powerful storm in the Arabian Sea region in decades – laid waste to parts of the western coast as it moved from Kerala to Gujarat, where it made landfall 8.30 pm Monday.