Twelve divers missing in Red Sea

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vjongene

Contributor
Messages
390
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Location
Willemstad, Curaçao
# of dives
1000 - 2499
Just heard on the evening news on Swiss TV about what could become one of the most tragic scuba accidents ever. Apparently, twelve divers from the MY Oyster, ex-Moon Dancer (Peter Hughes), went missing yesterday while diving the Brothers Islands in the Red Sea. There is already a thread on ScubaBoard in the Africa/Asia section: http://www.scubaboard.com/t67040.html

I will try to keep an eye on this, but if anyone has more information I would appreciate. I find it hard to believe that twelve divers could go missing all at once. The Oyster is a quality operation, with two chase boats and an experienced crew. As usual, the mainstream media are not very informative.
 
vjongene:
Just heard on the evening news on Swiss TV about what could become one of the most tragic scuba accidents ever. Apparently, twelve divers from the MY Oyster, ex-Moon Dancer (Peter Hughes), went missing yesterday while diving the Brothers Islands in the Red Sea. There is already a thread on ScubaBoard in the Africa/Asia section: http://www.scubaboard.com/t67040.html

I will try to keep an eye on this, but if anyone has more information I would appreciate. I find it hard to believe that twelve divers could go missing all at once. The Oyster is a quality operation, with two chase boats and an experienced crew. As usual, the mainstream media are not very informative.

They've been found - there's another post on this board with more info, but here's the BBC link

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3546926.stm
 
Kez:
They've been found - there's another post on this board with more info, but here's the BBC link

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3546926.stm

Here is the latest, from the Scotsman. It is beginning to look as if there were several contributing factors, with the main boat unable to look for the divers, rough seas, and strong currents.

---------------------------------------------------

Divers Recovering after Red Sea Rescue

By Neville Dean and Jennifer Sym, PA News


Five British divers are recovering today after they were rescued from the shark-infested waters of the Red Sea.

The five were among a group of 12 divers who went missing following a diving trip near the small island of El-Akhawein.

Egyptian naval boats found and rescued the divers more than 11 hours after they vanished when they were spotted in the water by a search helicopter.

The group – which also included five Portuguese and two Belgians – were reportedly spotted in the water 35 miles from El-Akhawein last night.

It is thought they had set off from the resort of Marsa Alam on Saturday for a week-long cruise on a luxurious dive vessel called The Oyster.

The Foreign Office said consular staff had spoken to one of the divers and reported that they were all fine and uninjured.

They had not been taken ashore or to hospital and had in fact returned to their boat, on which they were hoping to continue their holiday, a spokesman said.

Amr Ali, an official with the Red Sea Diving Union, said the divers were rescued by a diving boat at around 7pm British time last night.

“They were found floating in the water and all of them were alive,” Ali said.

Strong Red Sea currents swept the divers several miles west of the dive site, he said.

One theory being put forward locally was that the divers’ boat could also have developed a problem.

Sabed Hefny, owner of the Diamond Sea Dive Centre in Hurghada, around 150 miles north of Marsa Alam, said: “We do not know what happened exactly, but I think that maybe there was a hole in the boat.”

He said that the sea was so strong and the waves so high, that the divers could have been dragged away from the 75 metre vessel very quickly.

The Red Sea is a popular destination for British divers.

Marsa Alam, in the deep south of Egypt, has only been opened up to tourists in the past few years and has fast become a diving hotspot.

It was made more accessible by a new international airport, which opened in 2001, and a marina for hundreds of luxury yachts. There are now even weekly charter flights to the resort from Gatwick.

Diving enthusiasts are said to be attracted by the area’s first class shoreline and superb, uncrowded diving at several pristine sites.

Marsa Alam also boasts some of the newest live-aboard boats in the Red Sea.
 
Thankfully not a repeat of the shoddy seamanship displayed in Belize.......glad to hear they made it:)
 
Time for another movie! My Gawd, can you imagine what it's like to be lost at sea for 30 hours?! My mind boggles at what all the group must have gone, thru = panic, heroism, politics, etc. I can see those people being lifelong friends.
 
Sounds fishy that the fact aren't in. The boat might have had a hole in it??..please.
 
DandyDon:
Time for another movie! My Gawd, can you imagine what it's like to be lost at sea for 30 hours?! My mind boggles at what all the group must have gone, thru = panic, heroism, politics, etc. I can see those people being lifelong friends.

Here is the longest, and seemingly most accurate report on the incident so far, published online by the Telegraph. I am not so sure about the dolphins, though...

I should add that I did the Brothers cruise on the Oyster last year, and that I have nothing but good things to say about the boat and the crew. I am still very puzzled that with two chase boats they failed to find the group when they surfaced.

---------------------------------------------------

Dolphins led rescue boat to us, say divers lost in Red Sea
(Filed: 10/08/2004)


Holiday goes on for five divers who had thought they faced death, tied together and navigating by the stars, writes Caroline Davies

The British divers lost in the Red Sea for 13 and a half hours after being swept away told yesterday how they feared they would die and how they believed dolphins led rescuers to them.

As the five Britons, who were rescued with two Belgians and five Portuguese after a huge air and sea seach, recovered yesterday they spoke of how they fought severe exhaustion, dehydration and sunburn.

Boats and spotter planes failed to locate them when they lost contact with their Egyptian diving boat and were swept 45 miles away.

They roped themselves together, told jokes and sang Christmas carols to keep their spirits up as they drifted further and further from the Oyster, their live-aboard boat.

Yesterday the Britons, Richard Hallam, 28, the divemaster from Pickering, North Yorks, and friends Bruce de Courcy, 48, from Chilham, near Canterbury, and Paul Moulton, Geoff Woodfield and Alexandra Douglas, all from Wandsworth, south London, were continuing their holiday and back diving after their ordeal.

"We are all pretty shaken," said Mr de Courcy, a water feature designer, who met the other three on a Red Sea diving trip last year.

"When you think back, when you sit on your own and you think about it, it makes you cry," he said in an interview from the boat.

The five were in a party of 12 experienced divers who dived at 9am off al-Akhawain, the twin Little Brother islands. During the dive they were excited to see a hammerhead shark and two grey reef sharks on the reef.

They surfaced early and, following diving procedure, positioned a Surface Marker Buoy to alert the Oyster crew, although the current had already caused them to drift.

But, possibly because of the sun and the reflection on the water, the marker buoy was not spotted by the crew.

The 12 stuck together. Early on they saw a container ship and then another live-aboard ship, but the vessels passed by. Then, after six hours, they saw a spotter plane.

By now a full-scale emergency search had been underway for hours involving a private helicopter, the Egyptian navy and alerts to all ships in the area, activated by the Oyster Club that organised the diving trip.

"When we saw that plane, and it came right over our heads, we thought, 'That's it. We're safe'," said Mr de Courcy, a father of two daughters, aged 16 and 20, who runs a cider farm and garden centre in Chilham with his partner, Claire Raraty-Squires.

"Then it didn't dip its wings, nothing happened and it appeared it hadn't seen us. So from a real high, we were down to a real low."

The 12, most of whom had only met on the boat, kept each other going by talking about their backgrounds. They numbered themselves one to 12 and every few minutes - especially when it got dark - called out their numbers in sequence to make sure all were there.

Though the water was warm and they were wearing wetsuits, they were losing body heat and forced themselves to keep moving.

Everybody was exhausted. Two - a Belgian and a Portuguese - did not seem to be coping with the cold. "I would say those two would not have made it overnight," said Mr Hallam, the divemaster. As it grew dark, each tried to suppress panic.

"Everyone was searching in the wrong place," said Mr de Courcy, who is himself a qualified diving instructor. "Not only that, but when you are on the surface, you can't help wondering what's going to happen to your legs."

Although he believed the sharks in the area were placid and did not normally attack humans, "you can't help but wonder what is down there".

They spotted mountains in the dusk, tied themselves together and began swimming towards them slowly on their backs.

Navigating by compass and two stars, they estimated they could reach the shore 30 miles away.

"I think by that point we pretty much thought we had had it," said Mr de Courcy.

Then at around 8.30pm they sighted the Thunderbird, another live-aboard boat, and this time their torch signals received a positive response.

"It was adrenaline, relief, happiness," said Mr Hallam. On board, all celebrated with a cigarette - even the non-smokers.

All were examined at the scene by a doctor and opted to continue their holiday.

George Saleed, from the Oyster Club, said protocol had been followed to the strictest letter.

Longwood Holidays, the London-based tour operators which booked the holiday, said they had used the Oyster Club for many years and regarded them as very reliable.

An investigation is now under way by the Red Sea Association for Diving and Watersports.

Mr Hallam, who has worked for the Oyster Club for two months, said: "One of the most amazing things was, after we were rescued, the guys on the boat said there were dolphins jumping across the prow in the direction we were actually in.

"We heard dolphins when we were in the water, we could hear their echo location. I think those dolphins drew attention to us. There are stories about dolphins helping humans in distress, protecting them. And I think those dolphins helped us."
 
I am very glad they were found with relatively little permanent harm done. What terrible experience that must be, floating at night and lost in a huge body of water.

Is anyone else tired of reading the following attached to every salt water problem resulting in someone being in the water for some period of time? "Five British divers are recovering today after they were rescued from the shark-infested waters of the Red Sea."
I am talking about the term "shark-infested"? I sometimes think that if someone were lost in the Great Salt Lake, someone, somewhere would include "shark-infested" in the first line or two of the article.




vjongene:
Here is the longest, and seemingly most accurate report on the incident so far, published online by the Telegraph. I am not so sure about the dolphins, though...

I should add that I did the Brothers cruise on the Oyster last year, and that I have nothing but good things to say about the boat and the crew. I am still very puzzled that with two chase boats they failed to find the group when they surfaced.

---------------------------------------------------

Dolphins led rescue boat to us, say divers lost in Red Sea
(Filed: 10/08/2004)


Holiday goes on for five divers who had thought they faced death, tied together and navigating by the stars, writes Caroline Davies

The British divers lost in the Red Sea for 13 and a half hours after being swept away told yesterday how they feared they would die and how they believed dolphins led rescuers to them.

As the five Britons, who were rescued with two Belgians and five Portuguese after a huge air and sea seach, recovered yesterday they spoke of how they fought severe exhaustion, dehydration and sunburn.

Boats and spotter planes failed to locate them when they lost contact with their Egyptian diving boat and were swept 45 miles away.

They roped themselves together, told jokes and sang Christmas carols to keep their spirits up as they drifted further and further from the Oyster, their live-aboard boat.

Yesterday the Britons, Richard Hallam, 28, the divemaster from Pickering, North Yorks, and friends Bruce de Courcy, 48, from Chilham, near Canterbury, and Paul Moulton, Geoff Woodfield and Alexandra Douglas, all from Wandsworth, south London, were continuing their holiday and back diving after their ordeal.

"We are all pretty shaken," said Mr de Courcy, a water feature designer, who met the other three on a Red Sea diving trip last year.

"When you think back, when you sit on your own and you think about it, it makes you cry," he said in an interview from the boat.

The five were in a party of 12 experienced divers who dived at 9am off al-Akhawain, the twin Little Brother islands. During the dive they were excited to see a hammerhead shark and two grey reef sharks on the reef.

They surfaced early and, following diving procedure, positioned a Surface Marker Buoy to alert the Oyster crew, although the current had already caused them to drift.

But, possibly because of the sun and the reflection on the water, the marker buoy was not spotted by the crew.

The 12 stuck together. Early on they saw a container ship and then another live-aboard ship, but the vessels passed by. Then, after six hours, they saw a spotter plane.

By now a full-scale emergency search had been underway for hours involving a private helicopter, the Egyptian navy and alerts to all ships in the area, activated by the Oyster Club that organised the diving trip.

"When we saw that plane, and it came right over our heads, we thought, 'That's it. We're safe'," said Mr de Courcy, a father of two daughters, aged 16 and 20, who runs a cider farm and garden centre in Chilham with his partner, Claire Raraty-Squires.

"Then it didn't dip its wings, nothing happened and it appeared it hadn't seen us. So from a real high, we were down to a real low."

The 12, most of whom had only met on the boat, kept each other going by talking about their backgrounds. They numbered themselves one to 12 and every few minutes - especially when it got dark - called out their numbers in sequence to make sure all were there.

Though the water was warm and they were wearing wetsuits, they were losing body heat and forced themselves to keep moving.

Everybody was exhausted. Two - a Belgian and a Portuguese - did not seem to be coping with the cold. "I would say those two would not have made it overnight," said Mr Hallam, the divemaster. As it grew dark, each tried to suppress panic.

"Everyone was searching in the wrong place," said Mr de Courcy, who is himself a qualified diving instructor. "Not only that, but when you are on the surface, you can't help wondering what's going to happen to your legs."

Although he believed the sharks in the area were placid and did not normally attack humans, "you can't help but wonder what is down there".

They spotted mountains in the dusk, tied themselves together and began swimming towards them slowly on their backs.

Navigating by compass and two stars, they estimated they could reach the shore 30 miles away.

"I think by that point we pretty much thought we had had it," said Mr de Courcy.

Then at around 8.30pm they sighted the Thunderbird, another live-aboard boat, and this time their torch signals received a positive response.

"It was adrenaline, relief, happiness," said Mr Hallam. On board, all celebrated with a cigarette - even the non-smokers.

All were examined at the scene by a doctor and opted to continue their holiday.

George Saleed, from the Oyster Club, said protocol had been followed to the strictest letter.

Longwood Holidays, the London-based tour operators which booked the holiday, said they had used the Oyster Club for many years and regarded them as very reliable.

An investigation is now under way by the Red Sea Association for Diving and Watersports.

Mr Hallam, who has worked for the Oyster Club for two months, said: "One of the most amazing things was, after we were rescued, the guys on the boat said there were dolphins jumping across the prow in the direction we were actually in.

"We heard dolphins when we were in the water, we could hear their echo location. I think those dolphins drew attention to us. There are stories about dolphins helping humans in distress, protecting them. And I think those dolphins helped us."
 
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