Sinking a fishing boat, 12 fishermen were missing



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Khanh hoaThe Binh Dinh fishing boat that was heading ashore to avoid the storm was damaged by water, sank into the sea, causing the disappearance of 12 fishermen 143 nautical miles (about 264 km) from the mainland.

Colonel Tran Quoc Toan, commander of the Khanh Hoa Border Guard, said the fishing boat was sunk by Mr. Le Van (43 years old, from Binh Dinh). At around 1:00 p.m. on October 27, the train ran in the direction of Cam Ranh to prevent Storm Molave ​​(Storm No. 9) from running into trouble. On board at the time were 12 crew members.

Approximately 30 minutes later, Mr. Nguyen Van Toan’s fishing boat from Binh Dinh passed by, approached the boat in distress, but did not detect the whereabouts of the victims. “So far, the fishermen have not been found,” Colonel Toan said, saying that the fishing boat left on October 5 at the Tam Quan (Binh Dinh) border control station.

According to Colonel Toan, the Provincial Border Guard instructed the Cam Ranh Border Guard to notify ships operating in the area to search for ships in distress. At the same time, the guard station of the second squadron contacted the surrounding ships to understand the situation and call for help.

Khanh Hoa has more than 400 fishing boats with almost 2,850 fishermen in the waters of Truong Sa, Ninh Thuan, Binh Thuan … called to shelter from the storm.

Hurricane Molave ​​formed after Typhoon Saude, on October 25, southeast of Manila. The storm left at least two dead, 19 missing, many villages flooded, and nearly 100,000 Filipinos evacuated. After sweeping through the Philippines, the storm continues to strengthen in the South China Sea and will make landfall in central Vietnam.

Xuan Ngoc – Viet Quoc

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