Tour boat carrying 26 people missing, reported sinking off Japan's northern coast
Coast guard says boat issued distress call Saturday that ship's bow had flooded
A tour boat with 26 people aboard was missing in rough and cold waters off northern Japan on Saturday after issuing a distress call and reporting to be sinking, the coast guard said.
No survivors have been found after more than 10 hours of an intense search involving six patrol boats, five aircraft and divers. The coast guard said it will continue with the search through the night.
The 17-tonne Kazu 1 made an emergency call, saying the ship's bow had flooded and was beginning to sink and tilt while it was travelling off the western coast of Shiretoko Peninsula, in the northern island of Hokkaido, the coast guard said.
The tour boat has since lost contact, according to the coast guard. It said the boat was carrying 24 passengers, including two children, and two crew members.
Freezing sea temperatures typical for April
Average April sea temperatures in Shiretoko National Park are just above freezing.
An official with the vessel's operator, Shiretoko Pleasure Cruise, said he could not comment as he had to respond to calls from worried families of the passengers.
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, who was attending a two-day water summit in Kumamoto in southern Japan, was cancelling his program for Sunday and was set to return to Tokyo to deal with the missing boat, the NHK public broadcaster reported.
High waves and strong winds were observed in the area around noon, according to a local fisheries co-operative. Japanese media reports said fishing boats had returned to port before noon because of the bad weather.
NHK said there was a warning for high waves of up to three metres high.
Risk of hypothermia
Yoshihiko Yamada, a Tokai University marine science professor, said the boat was likely to have run aground after it was tossed around in high waves and damaged, flooded and probably sank.
A tour boat of that size does not usually carry a lifeboat, and passengers possibly could not jump out of a rapidly sinking vessel with its windows probably closed to shield them from strong winds.
In an interview with TBS television, Yamada said there is also a slight possibility that the boat might have been hit by a whale.
The cold temperatures and strong winds could cause hypothermia and put the passengers in severe conditions for survival, according to Jun Abe, vice-chair of the Society of Water Rescue and Survival Research. "It's a very severe condition, especially when they are wet," he told TBS.
According to the operator's website, the tour takes about three hours and offers a scenic view of the western coast of the peninsula.
The national park is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is famous as the southernmost region to see drifting sea ice.