Features

Navy divers recover body of one of the nine victims of submarine accident

By Jean Christiensen The Associated Press
Thursday October 18, 2001

HONOLULU — Navy divers entered the wreck of the Ehime Maru and recovered the body of one of the nine men and boys killed when the Japanese fishing boat was accidentally sunk by a surfacing U.S. submarine. 

Navy officials gave few details about Tuesday’s operation, such as where on board the vessel the body was found. 

“The U.S. Navy is committed to treating the families respectfully and honorably. We’re committed to an honorable closure for those families,” said Lt. Cmdr. Neil Sheehan, the Navy’s liaison officer for the Japanese victims’ families. 

The search for the dead is expected to take a month. 

Divers using cameras spotted the body before actually entering the Ehime Maru. 

Lt. Cmdr. Gregg Baumann, a spokesman for the operation, said divers still must clear large amounts of fishing line and dislodged objects — including a refrigerator — from the exterior and interior of the vessel. 

Over the weekend, the Ehime Maru was towed 16 miles underwater from the 2,000-foot waters where it sank Feb. 9 after it was rammed by the USS Greeneville during a rapid-surfacing drill. 

Twenty-six people from the high school fisheries training vessel from Japan were rescued.  

Four students and five adults were never found and are believed to be in the wreck. 

The wreck now lies in 115 feet of water a mile off Oahu’s southern shore. 

“I pray that as many bodies as possible will be found, and am thankful for the U.S. Navy’s thorough preparations leading up to this day,” said Moriyuki Kato, governor of the Ehime state, where the fisheries school is located. 

Once the bodies are removed, the Ehime Maru will be towed more than six miles out to sea and allowed to sink. 

The unprecedented recovery effort has cost more than $60 million.