Yahoo – AFP,
Eitan ABRAMOVICH, Carlos REYES, November 21, 2017
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| The vessel would have enough oxygen for its crew to survive underwater for seven days, if there was no hull breach, officials say (AFP Photo/Handout) |
Mar del
Plata (Argentina) (AFP) - Experts ruled out Monday the possibility that noise
detected at sea could have come from an Argentine submarine missing with 44
people aboard, in the latest bad news to hit their relatives.
"The
sound footprint could not correspond to a sub's... it may have been a noise
from a living thing," said navy spokesman Enrique Balbi.
"The
search continues," he added, noting that there are 14 vessels and 10
aircraft scouring area 24 hours a day in the midst of a storm front in the
South Atlantic that is expected to ease on Tuesday.
News that
noises had been detected had raised hopes to find alive the 44 crew members aboard
the ARA San Juan, missing for five days in the South Atlantic -- after earlier
apparent distress calls were dismissed as not coming from the vessel.
Argentina
will still dispatch vessels with multi-beam undersea probes to explore the site
where the noises were detected, some 360 kilometers (225 miles) offshore in
shallow waters at the edge of Argentina's continental shelf that were on the
sub's course, Balbi said.
The noises
sounded like tools being banged on the hull of a submarine to attract the attention
of rescuers, CNN reported, citing an unnamed senior US navy official familiar
with the international search effort.
A US Navy
P-8A Poseidon plane was immediately dispatched to the site where the noises
were detected by two Argentine ships. The plane dropped sonar buoys into the
sea to record the noises.
A
multinational air and sea search is under way with help from seven countries
including Brazil, Britain, Chile, the United States and Uruguay.
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Warship
captain Gabriel Galeazzi revealed the vessel had reported a mechanical
breakdown in its final communication (AFP Photo/EITAN ABRAMOVICH)
|
'Breakdown'
Earlier in
the day, the navy said the German-built TR-1700class diesel-electric submarine
launched in 1983 had reported a mechanical breakdown in its final communication
Wednesday.
The nature
of the breakdown was not immediately clear. It was the first time the navy
indicated it had been aware of a problem.
"The
vessel surfaced and it reported a breakdown. It was therefore asked to change
course and go to Mar del Plata," said Gabriel Galeazzi, the head of the
naval base in the city, located 400 kilometers south of Buenos Aires.
Balbi also
told reporters that analysis has shown that seven signals received by naval
bases over the weekend were not attempted distress calls from the submarine's
satellite phone.
False
hope?
Monday's
revelations were a blow to relatives of sailors aboard the sub, around 100 of
whom are being housed at the Mar del Plata naval base as they await news of the
crew.
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Juan Carlos
Mendoza, father of missing submariner Ariel Fernando Mendoza, is one of
the
relatives waiting for news in Mar del Plata (AFP Photo/EITAN ABRAMOVICH)
|
"They
have a lot of hope. The hours go by and the worry rate goes up. The best
tranquilizer is accurate information," said Enrique Stein, a member of a
psychological support unit set up for the families.
Andrea Ali,
wife of Franco Ali, an electrician aboard the San Juan, added: "We don't
know anything. We are waiting with a great deal of anxiety."
The
submarine's fate has gripped the nation, and President Mauricio Macri visited
the relatives and prayed with them.
Macri was
briefed on the search during his visit to the base.
Multinational rescue efforts
Search
efforts have been hampered by inclement weather, including a powerful storm
that has whipped up waves reaching seven meters (23 feet) in height.
Rescuers
are focusing on an ocean patch about 300 kilometers in diameter, radiating from
the last point of contact.
US Southern
Command has deployed the Poseidon patrol and reconnaissance plane with a crew
of 21, as well as a NASA P-3 research aircraft, and other equipment and
personnel.
![]() |
Map of the
search zone in the South Atlantic where an international
team is hunting for a
missing Argentine submarine (AFP Photo/Anella RETA)
|
The US Navy
has deployed two unmanned underwater vehicles that use a sonar system to create
an image of large sections of the sea floor.
Britain's
Royal Navy said it had sent the HMS Protector, an Antarctic patrol ship.
The
submarine had been returning from a routine mission to Ushuaia, near the
southernmost tip of South America, to Mar del Plata.
It is one
of three submarines in the Argentine fleet.
Sixty-five
meters long and seven meters wide, it was built by Germany's Thyssen
Nordseewerke and launched more than three decades ago.
It
underwent a refit between 2007 and 2014 to extend its use by about 30 years.
Argentina probes abnormal noise detected in the South Atlantic hours after last contact with missing sub pic.twitter.com/j4FyQKGzLA— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 23, 2017
#UPDATE Noises detected in search for missing Argentine sub https://t.co/CFyQHewlJP pic.twitter.com/AxA5aADhxf— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 20, 2017




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