Tanker ablaze, 32 missing after collision off China

BEIJING - A tanker carrying oil from Iran to South Korea was ablaze and spilling its cargo off eastern China Sunday after a collision with a cargo ship which left 32 tanker crew members missing. The vessel, carrying 136,000 tonnes of oil condensate, caught fire after the collision Saturday night and its crew of 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis were missing, China’s transport ministry said.

The other vessel had been damaged but “without jeopardising the safety of the ship” and all its 21 Chinese crew had been rescued, it added in a statement. The tanker was still ablaze Sunday. Footage from state television channel CCTV showed the ship in the grip of an intense fire, enveloped in clouds of black smoke. The Panamanian-flagged 274-metre (899-foot) tanker Sanchi was operated by Iran’s Glory Shipping and heading to South Korea with its cargo, the ministry said. The accident happened 160 nautical miles east of Shanghai.

The second vessel involved was a Hong Kong-flagged cargo ship, the CF Crystal, carrying 64,000 tonnes of grain. “The Sanchi is still floating and continues to burn, there is oil on the sea surface; search and rescue operations are rushing and underway,” the ministry said in a statement. The foreign ministry said China had deployed specialised “cleaning ships” to the scene to minimise environmental damage. The cause of the collision was under investigation, it added.

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