From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Apr 2): Tubbataha, US Navy divers to assess reef damage
As it awaits the assessment dives that would determine the extent of the
damage to Tubbataha Reef, the Philippine government is sending a Coast Guard
team to Japan to resume its investigation into the grounding of the USS Guardian
on the atoll, government officials said yesterday.
After the last section of the US Navy minesweeper was lifted off the reef on
Saturday, a “final dive” would be conducted to assess the damage wrought by the
Jan. 17 incident, said Undersecretary Abigail Valte, deputy presidential
spokesperson.
Transportation Secretary Joseph E.A. Abaya, for his part, said he expected a
“series of dives” by the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG), Tubbataha Management
Office (TMO) and the United States Navy to come up with an “accurate assessment”
of the damage to the reef.
But the TMO said Monday only its divers and the US Navy’s would conduct the
assessment dives.
Tubbataha Reefs Superintendent Angelique Songco said the TMO was organizing
the assessment and it will be joined by the US Navy, represented by reserved
officer and marine biologist Lee Shannon.
The Coast Guard on Monday confirmed this, saying the Tubbataha Reef
management’s divers, not the PCG’s, would make the “final assessment” of the
damage.
PCG spokesman Lt. Commander Armand Balilo, however, told the Inquirer the
Coast Guard was “willing to assist the Tubbataha Management Office in conducting
the reef damage assessment by providing resources like ships and rubber boats.”
Unesco assessment
Earlier, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Office
(Unesco), which had declared the Tubbataha Reef a World Heritage Site, had
volunteered a “team of experts” to assess the damage to the natural wonder.
But Task Force Tubbataha—composed of the PCG, TMO and other groups—did not
take up the Unesco offer.
On Jan. 22, five days after the Guardian mistakenly entered the reef and
promptly got stuck on it, 14 Coast Guards divers checked out the initial damage.
They reported that up to 1,600 square meters of the reef had been damaged.
Meanwhile, the manual cleanup of the grounding site is expected to be
completed Tuesday.
The reef damage assessment “will start as soon as the cleanup operation wraps
up,” said Balilo.
Pending the assessment, Abaya said a three-man Coast Guard team, led by Adm.
Louie Tuazon, would fly to Japan this week to resume the investigation of the
grounding.
Since the Guardian’s crew refused to be personally interviewed, the Coast
Guard team would be meeting with US Navy investigators, Abaya said.
“They have issues with a face to face [investigation]. That’s the agreement
we had before they left. But we’re allowed to look at their investigation report
and ask clarificatory questions,” he said in a phone interview.
The US-Navy contracted international salvage team finally lifted the stern
(back) of the 68-meter warship off the reef on Saturday afternoon following
weeks of a recovery operation that was often delayed by bad weather.
The cut sections of the ship were taken on the barge Seabridge S-700 to an
undisclosed US military facility in Japan.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/70873/tubbataha-us-navy-divers-to-assess-reef-damage
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.