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Australian aircraft joins search for missing ferry

Air
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By: Reporter
maritime new zealand
Maritime New Zealand ©2018.

Aircraft from Australia and the US Coast Guard will join the search for the missing Kiribati ferry MV Butiraoi, which had an estimated 50 people onboard.

Aircraft from Australia and the US Coast Guard will join the search for the missing Kiribati ferry MV Butiraoi, which had an estimated 50 people onboard.

As Rescue Coordination Centre NZ (RCCNZ) and the Royal New Zealand Air Force continue to assist the Rescue Coordination Centre in Nadi, Fiji, and Kiribati search and rescue authorities to find survivors, RCCNZ has passed on the request for further air assistance to the Australian and the US search organisations.

AMSA (Australian Maritime Safety Authority) Challenger search and rescue jet aircraft have started searching, and the US Coast Guard’s C-130 Hercules is due to arrive on Tuesday.

 
 

The NZ Air Force P-3 Orion has continued the search and has so far searched 385,000 square kilometres – an area larger than New Zealand.

RCCNZ is providing support and guidance to Fiji and Kiribati on where to search, said senior search and rescue officer Greg Johnston.

"The Kiribati search and rescue authorities have undertaken a massive effort in conjunction with Rescue Coordination Centre Nadi. We’re constantly updating our search planning as the area where the people could have drifted keeps increasing," Johnston said.

Johnston says the search area is in remote ocean 500 miles of west of Kiribati, which is a major factor in this operation. Weather conditions have been favourable in recent days.

"We have full confidence in the aircraft and the radar equipment they have onboard. The searchers are guided by RCCNZ’s drift modelling that takes into account wind and currents and targets their efforts to find any survivors," he said.

"We’re working together to assist Kiribati and Fiji as best we can. A huge ‘thank you’ to AMSA, US Coast Guard, our NZ Air Force colleagues and the crew of the FV Lomalo for helping out with this search – their support is hugely appreciated."

A Kiribati marine patrol boat with medical personnel onboard, arriving Tuesday, will collect the seven survivors rescued from a dinghy on Sunday afternoon by fishing vessel FV Lomalo.

The people on board the dinghy were three men two aged in their 20s and one aged 34 and four females three in their 20s and one aged 14. They are understood to be in reasonable health.

Two commercial vessels from Kiribati are heading to the area to assist with the search.

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