One sailor dies from fire injuries
Steve MacLeod and Keith Bonnell
Canadian Press and Global Television
October 6, 2004
The Canadian sub HMCS Chicoutimi, shown in a file photo from the early 1990s. (CP)
Lt.-Cdr. Jim Pope, right, exhibits an oxygen generator as Cmdr. Randy Truscott looks on at a nerws conference concerning the fire on HMCS Chicoutimi, in Halifax on Wednesday. (CP/Andrew Vaughan)
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HALIFAX -- One of the crewmembers injured in a fire aboard HMCS Chicoutimi is dead. Prime Minister Martin announced the death in Ottawa today.
Three injured sailors, including one reportedly in critical condition, were arlifted from a heavily damaged Canadian submarine late Wednesday as the rest their crewmates remained adrift off the coast of Ireland for a second night.
The men were declared the most in need of medical attention after a major fire Tuesday left HMCS Chicoutimi dead in the water.
"They were the worst of the casualties," said Richard Buckland, a commander with the British Navy.
Buckland said the navy had planned to take the injured men by helicopter to a hospital in northern Ireland, but the chopper was diverted to a closer hospital in Sligo, in southern Ireland after one of the men's condition worsened.
Officials at Sligo General Hospital said one of the men was listed in critical condition while his two shipmates had been able to walk in, the Associated Press reported from London. No further details were available.
Canadian navy officials in Halifax couldn't confirm the report.
The diesel-electric submarine, one of four used subs recently leased from the Royal Navy, was on its maiden voyage to Canada when the fire broke out.
A British frigate pulled alongside the sub Wednesday and dropped off a doctor and an assistant.
Canadian officials admitted the fire, which is believed to have started between the commanding officer's cabin and an electrical room, was more serious than first thought.
"This was a major fire," Commodore Tyrone Pile told a news conference in Halifax.
"The fire was of sufficient strength that most of the submarine's portable firefighting equipment was used to put it out."
© Canadian Press and Global Television 2004
http://www.canada.com/national/story.html?id=3a79238f-328a-4258-bb9a-9f3379919449
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