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13 dead after US Navy rescue bid in Gulf of Aden

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13 dead after US Navy rescue bid in Gulf of Aden
28 September 2010 Last updated at 04:41 ET
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Tragic end to US rescue bid off Somali coast
A broken-down skiff awaits assistance from the USS Winston Churchill warship in the Gulf of Aden on Monday, in a picture supplied by the US Navy The US Navy supplied a picture of the skiff, taken on Monday

At least 13 people drowned and another eight are missing after a US naval ship tried to come to the aid of a broken-down skiff in the Gulf of Aden.

Navy officials in Washington said that the USS Winston Churchill had tried but failed to repair the skiff's engines.

It then began towing the vessel to the Somali coast.

But the rescue effort turned to tragedy when passengers rushed to one side of the vessel to get food and aid, causing it to capsize.

All 85 passengers were thrown into the water, though most were rescued.

The US Navy says they were made up of 75 Ethiopians and 10 Somalis, and the boat had been travelling from Somalia.
Investigation

The boat was first discovered adrift in the Gulf of Aden on Sunday, the US Navy said.

After crew from the destroyer were unable to repair the skiff's engine, they began towing the vessel back to the Somali coast.
Map

They were transferring food and aid to the boat on Monday morning when the passengers "rushed to one side and the skiff began taking on water, quickly capsizing and sinking rapidly, leaving all 85 passengers in the water", the US Navy's Fifth Fleet said in a statement quoted by AFP news agency.

Sixty-one passengers were rescued and are now aboard the USS Churchill, the US Navy said, but 13 drowned and eight remained missing.

It said it was investigating what happened.

It was not clear why the skiff was in the area - a busy shipping lane which has been riven by attacks by Somali pirates.
 
Maybe the headline should read 68 people rescued by US navy, 13 lost, 8 missing.

Towing a vessel is always fraught with risks, I can also understand the reluctance of the Captain to attempt to transfer that number of people off of the vessel and also to provide security aboard his ship for that many people. If the navy had not come along, likely they would have all died.
 
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