Missing of Argentina's marine
Concerns grow as Argentina
intensifies submarine search
NEWS / ARGENTINA
Latin America Argentina
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The San Juan which last made contact on
Wednesday has 44 crew members on board
[File: Armada Argentina/Handout via Reuters]
A NASA research plane has joined the
search for a missing Argentine
submarine, as concern is growing over
the fate of its 44 crew members.
No contact has been made with the
vessel, the ARA San Juan, since
Wednesday, prompting authorities to
launch a major air and sea search
operation.
"We will do what is necessary to find
the submarine as soon as possible,"
President Mauricio Macri said on his
Twitter account on Saturday.
The TR-1700 class diesel-electric vessel
had been returning from a routine
mission to Ushuaia, near the
southernmost tip of South America, to
its base at Mar del Plata, around 400km
south of the capital, Buenos Aires.
Argentina accepted an offer from the
United States for a NASA P-3 explorer
aircraft, which had been stationed in
Ushuaia and was preparing to depart to
Antarctica, to make an exploratory
flight over the search area.
Rising tensionDaniel Schweimler,
reporting from Mar Del Plata, said
"tension is mounting" with "each hour
that goes by".
"The families of those crew members
are gathering at the naval base here in
Mar Del Plata," said Schweimler, adding
that Pope Francis - an Argentine - had
said he was praying for the missing
crew members.
The German-made ARA San Juan is one
of three submarines in the Argentine
fleet.
"It is a very old submarine," said
Schweimler.
"The Argentines bought it second-hand
from its German manufacturers back in
1985. It had a big overhaul in 2008 with
the idea of it staying in service for
another 30 years."
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