World

Three rescued after sharks attack inflatable yacht off Australia’s northeast coast


Three people on board an inflatable catamaran in the Coral Sea off the northeast coast of Australia have been rescued after the vessel was damaged from several shark attacks, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) said on Wednesday.
Satellite photos and a video on the AMSA website showed a large part of the stern of the yacht torn away.
For the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app.
“The vessel departed from Vanuatu and was bound for Cairns (Australia) when contact was established. Both hulls of the vessel have been damaged following several shark attacks,” the AMSA said in a statement.

Evgeny Kovalevsky, a crew member among the three rescued after sharks attacked a yacht off the Australian coast, pose for a photograph, off Efate Island, Vanuatu, on August 28, 2023. (Reuters)

Rescue crews responded to an emergency positioning beacon registered to the Tion, a nine-meter inflatable catamaran on around-the-world expedition, early on Wednesday morning. The yacht was located about 835 kms (519 miles) southeast of Cairns in the Coral Sea.
AMSA requested the assistance of a Panama-flagged vehicle carrier, which successfully conducted the rescue.
The three passengers — two Russian and one French citizen — are due to arrive in Brisbane on Thursday, AMSA said.
The three men on board the boat were unharmed, said Anna Kosikhina, a spokesperson for the voyage, which she said was aimed at promoting Russia and Siberia and began two years ago.
“They were all intact. Nobody is hurt,” she said.
“The only thing is that the balloons of the inflatable catamaran were blown away.”
This was not the first accident on the voyage, Kosikhina said, with the steering device of a previous vessel failing during a previous leg from Chile to Easter Island.
The crew continued the expedition on an inflatable catamaran by the same manufacturer that had been stored on the island for several years.

Read more:

Surfer recovering after great white shark attack in Western Australia

Sydney beaches close after first fatal shark attack in 60 years

Australia deploys shark-scanning drones to combat series of deadly attacks

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending

Exit mobile version