Quantcast
Latest Stories

Dismantling of US Navy ship to start on Monday

By

In this Jan. 22, 2013 photo released by the Philippine Coast Guard, coast guard divers approach the USS Guardian, a US Navy minesweeper, to assess the situation after it ran aground last week off Tubbataha Reef. AP FILE PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines—The American minesweeper USS Guardian, which is stuck on the Tubbataha Reef in Palawan, will be “chopped up” beginning Monday, a Philippine Coast Guard official said Saturday.

PCG Palawan District commander Commodore Enrico Evangelista said the crane ship MT Jascon 25 was due to arrive in the area at 11 p.m. Saturday and that salvaging operations for the USS Guardian would begin on Monday.

“For the past one month, we prepared the USS Guardian for removal and the best scheme to remove (it) is through cutting,” Evangelista said in an interview. “We have already removed the things that can be removed so now [the entire ship] is ready for removal. We will begin cutting (on Monday).”

Evangelista said they had already removed “50-caliber machine guns, small guns and ammunition but no missiles.”

The United States earlier hired the services of the salvaging ships MT Trabajador 1 of Malayan Towage and Salvaging Corp. and the Vos Apollo of a Malaysian company based in Singapore. The US Navy’s USNS Salvor and the PCG’s BRP Romblon are also at the site.

Evangelita said the chopped up parts of the ship would be taken to Vos Apollo and transferred to a barge from Subic Bay.

“This is a warship of the US Navy so they will determine where it will be disposed. I still don’t know what they intend to do with it. The ship may have a design that is a trade secret,” he said.

He added that the Philippine government no longer needed these ship parts for its investigation into the grounding incident.

In Baguio City, Transportation Secretary Joseph Emilio Abaya  ruled out the possibility of sending the crew of the USS Guardian to jail for running aground on the Tubbataha Reef.

“It becomes tricky on that respect,” Abaya told reporters when asked if the US Navy servicemen could be imprisoned for destroying the corals at the Tubbataha Reef as provided in RA 10067, the law that established the Tubbataha Reef National Park.

Abaya said it was accepted in the general practice of international laws that “men of war, foreign naval vessels enjoy immunity, especially if it is in the line of duty.”

“So that has been practiced (worldwide), so it would be difficult on that part,” Abaya said on the sidelines of the Philippine Military Academy  Homecoming in Fort del Pilar. Abaya is a member of PMA Class ’88.

Nonetheless, Abaya said the US Navy would still be sanctioned for the damage its minesweeper caused to the reef that has been declared a World Heritage Site by the United Nations.

The USS Guardian, which ran aground on January 17, destroyed some 4,000 square meters of corals. But Abaya said the overall damage to the reef had yet to be “assessed” because the ship was still stuck there.

The only way to have an “accurate picture” of the damage is if the ship has been removed, he said.

Abaya expressed hope that the salvaging of USS Guardian would be finished by March, depending on the weather in the area as the personal safety of the crew should also be considered.

Abaya noted that the US government has been “very cooperative and they have immediately apologized… The least they can do is cooperate, become transparent, and share with the people what’s going on.”

Abaya said there was some speculation about how the ship ran aground.

“Some say they probably enjoyed too much of an R&R in Subic. They said there was an error in digital charts. Some say they were doing a different thing there, on their own. This is all speculation so it would be irresponsible on my part to even assume,” Abaya said. With a report from Nikko Dizon


Follow Us


Follow us on Facebook Follow on Twitter Follow on Twitter


Recent Stories:

Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step out? Get breaking alerts on your mobile.phone. Text ON INQ BREAKING to 4467, for Globe, Smart and Sun subscribers in the Philippines.

Tags: Environment , Palawan , Tubbataha Reef , USS Guardian

  • DakuAkongUtin

    This is caused by High School dropout s of American Navy. Their stupidity never goes out of style.  Kawawa naman ang Tubbathata Reef

    • Crazy_horse101010

      neither does yours if fact it gets worse every time you open your mouth as i asked you before show me proof that their dropouts. and you already proven you could care less about reefs because i asked you to get off your lazy butt and stop the blasting theygoes on every day and your still there crying and the blasting is still going on hypocrite, i still hear the booms that goes on every night where are you hero

  • giltor

    If the US could return captured war implements during their last war to Japan – flags, diaries, maps, pictures, etc and weapons like samurai swords, pistols, rifles, cannons and other destructive/offensive materiel like tanks, ships and planes used against the US forces.

    Why couldn’t Americans find in their collective hearts to return non-offensive religious articles to the people of Balangiga like their innocent church bells, taken by US Army in 1901?

    Surely, many Balangiga children missed their church bells and pine to hear those bells on so many past Christmas seasons.

    No amount of money could repair the damage to coral reef. It is the folly of man to believe they could do it by spending money to epoxy the damage. But surely as the sun rises tommorow that money would only go to the pockets of favored few.

    HERE’S THE DEAL!

    No money (I could see Trump’s smile from here) or consumables for the damages to Tubbataha: JUST RETURN OUR BALANGIGA BELLS – STAT!

    Peace.



Copyright © 2013, .
To subscribe to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper in the Philippines, call +63 2 896-6000 for Metro Manila and Metro Cebu or email your subscription request here.
Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate. Or write The Readers' Advocate:
c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer Chino Roces Avenue corner Yague and Mascardo Streets, Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines Or fax nos. +63 2 8974793 to 94
Advertisement

News

  • Philippines financial district bans plastic bags
  • China astronaut teaches lesson from space
  • Singapore demands urgent Indonesia action on smog
  • Panic over MERS virus fades in Saudi Arabia
  • Sao Paulo gripped by ‘Tropical Spring’ revolt
  • Sports

  • A title, and legacies, on the line for Heat, Spurs
  • Arellano looks to continue strong preseason play
  • Co fulfills coaching dream with Cardinals
  • Archers Yap, Chipeco still on target, bag 2 golds
  • Avena paces PH Senior by 2
  • Lifestyle

  • Dolce and Gabbana sentenced to jail for tax dodge
  • No gimmicks, no concepts–but great steaks and more, y’all
  • Pizza, pasta, risotto–Italian fare ‘Koreanized’ and made more garlicky
  • This pizza is found only in Canada–and now in PH
  • Filipino chef making waves in Singapore–for Japanese food
  • Entertainment

  • Actor James Gandolfini dies in Italy at age 51
  • Stars share reactions to James Gandolfini’s death
  • Genre-busting “The Kitchen Musical” now on Myx TV menu
  • Rizal concept album still rocking, rolling along
  • Zsa Zsa Padilla still singing sad songs
  • Business

  • Asian stocks down as Fed sees slower bond buys
  • Dollar firm as US Fed hints at stimulus tapering
  • Micro-credit financing bill in House pushed
  • Aquino: Growth must be inclusive
  • 8 tips on how to send money from the Philippines to anywhere in the world
  • Technology

  • Social network gaffes plague Japanese politicians
  • Microsoft changes Xbox One policies after outcry
  • Zubiri disowns bogus website
  • Internet balloons to benefit small business—Google
  • Dating site for broody singles launches in Denmark
  • Opinion

  • Mending nets
  • The Great Flood
  • What’s in a name?
  • CComedia’s statement on the cruel rape joke
  • It’s way past time for action
  • Global Nation

  • Bello warns overseas labor exec of libel
  • Jinggoy Estrada threatens P1 budget for DFA, DOLE over sex scandal
  • Overseas labor exec denies running sex ring
  • Jose Maria Sison: We will talk if gov’t shows sobriety, willingness
  • Exploited Filipinos in US 7-11 stores OK, execs say
  • Marketplace
    Advertisement
    © Copyright 1997-2013 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved