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MV Sage Sagittarius

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
History
NameSage Sagittarius
Port of registry Panama
Launched27 December 2000
StatusActive
General characteristics
Tonnage73,427 tonnes deadweight (DWT)
Length234.93m
Beam43m
Draught10.5m
Notes[1]

The MV Sage Sagittarius is a bulk carrier built in 2000. The vessel is operated by the NYK Line.

In 2012 three men died aboard the vessel on a routine return voyage from Japan to Newcastle to pick up a bulk load of coal. On the way to Newcastle approximately 470 nautical miles (870 km) from the coast of Queensland in the Coral Sea when the chief cook, Cesar Llanto, was reported missing. Australian authorities were notified, and the ship turned around, and a 36-hour search commenced.[2]

A company official, Kosaku Monji, was dispatched to investigate and landed in Brisbane and helicoptered to the vessel along with two security officers. The ship was diverted to Port Kembla and was met by a large number of Australian Federal Police officers who searched the ship and collected evidence. Although all of the crew had not been interviewed, the ship proceeded to Newcastle, where the body of the chief engineer, Hector Collado, was found with multiple injuries after having toppled over the edge of a railing and fallen 11 metres (36 ft) as the ship berthed. New South Wales Police officers investigated, with many of the seamen being taken from the vessel to be interviewed. Nearly all the crew and the captain of the vessel were flown out of the country two days later. Four days after the second death, the vessel steamed out of Newcastle and back to Japan, where it berthed at Kudamatsu Port two weeks later. The ship was unloaded for three days when the body of Kosaku Monji was found crushed in a conveyor belt.[3][4][5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Sage Sagittarius Bulk Carrier". Marine Traffic. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  2. ^ Mario Christodoulou; Alison McClymont; Linton Besser (1 June 2015). "Sage Sagittarius: Letters reveal bullying and gun smuggling on vessel dubbed ship of death". Four Corners. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  3. ^ Mark Morri (5 September 2012). "Three crew die in six weeks on 'death ship' Sage Sagittarius". Daily Telegraph. News Corporation. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  4. ^ Ian Kirkwood (27 October 2012). "Three suspicious deaths on ship". Newcastle Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  5. ^ Owen Jacques (14 June 2014). "The muddy waters surrounding the 'murder ship'". Northern Star. Australian Regional Media. Retrieved 6 June 2015.