Indonesian warships yesterday led the hunt for a submarine that went missing with 53 crew aboard and only enough oxygen for a few days.
An oil spill where the submarine was thought to have submerged early Wednesday pointed to possible fuel-tank damage, and fanned fears of a deadly disaster.
The crew on the KRI Nanggala 402 could have enough oxygen until early Saturday, but time was quickly running out as rescuers scoured the coast off holiday island Bali where it disappeared.
“There’s time until Saturday around 3am. Let’s hope we can find them before then,” navy chief of staff Yudo Margono told reporters.
However, defence analysts have warned that the vessel could have already broken into pieces if it has sunk to depths believed to be as much as 2,300 feet — well below what it was built to withstand.
Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo asked his country to pray for the crew, while Australian Defence Minister Peter Dutton said initial reports raised the prospect of a “terrible tragedy”.
The German-built submarine was scheduled to conduct live torpedo exercises when it asked for permission to dive. It lost contact shortly after.
Search teams were focused on an area around the oil slick.
But the exact location of the vessel had yet to be pinpointed, the navy said, with warships and helicopters assisting in the hunt.
Damage to the submarine’s fuel tank could spell big trouble.
“If your tank’s cracked it is not very good news,” said Collin Koh, a naval affairs specialist and research fellow at the S Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.
“Because we are talking about the pressure hull of the submarine being breached. So it could cause potential flooding.”
Neighbouring Singapore and Malaysia have already dispatched ships that are expected to arrive in the coming days, including the city-state’s MV Swift Rescue — a submarine rescue vessel.
India yesterday said it had sent a ship to assist in the search, while the US, Australia, France and Germany are among other nations that have offered help.
Indonesia’s military has so far refused to comment about whether the decades-old submarine, carrying 53 crew, was over capacity.
But it has said the submarine might have sunk to vast depths after a blackout that left its crew powerless to control the vessel.
“There are too many unknowns right now,” said Curie Maharani, a defence expert at Indonesia’s Bina Nusantara university. “But what we do know is that it’s a race against time.”
Frank Owen, secretary of the Submarine Institute of Australia, warned that rescuing any surviving crew quickly would be near impossible.
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