Time ticking down on missing Indonesian submarine

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
8 Min Read

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JAKARTA – Soon to be joined by vessels from other countries, the Indonesian Navy is in a race against time to find a 40-year-old German-built submarine that went missing 96 kilometers off the north coast of Bali on Wednesday with 53 crewmen aboard.

Sonar operators said they lost contact with the KRI Nanggala-402 soon after it was given permission to dive at the start of what was described as a live torpedo drill. The Type-209 submarine can remain submerged for two to three days.

A search plane reported spotting a broad oil slick and some unidentified debris where the 1,395-ton Nanggala went down in the Java Sea at the approaches to the Lombok Strait, separating Bali and neighboring Lombok island.

The average depth of the Java Sea is a relatively shallow 45 meters, but sailors with experience of the waters around Bali say there are canyons off the island’s north coast that are as deep as 600-700 meters, enough to crush a submarine.

Speculation for the cause of the accident has ranged from an electrical malfunction to an ordnance explosion at depth, similar to that which sank the Russian nuclear-powered submarine Kurski in the Barents Sea in August 2000.

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