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Indian sailors die after being trapped after explosion, fire on submarine

(Reuters) – Eighteen Indian sailors were trapped and some were killed after an explosion and fire on a diesel-powered submarine berthed at a base in Mumbai on Wednesday, souring a week of naval milestones, including the launch of a locally built aircraft carrier.

A man watches Indian Navy submarine INS Sindhurakshak on fire in Mumbai
A man watches Indian Navy submarine INS Sindhurakshak on fire in Mumbai late August 13, 2013. REUTERS/Vikalp Shah

Defense Minister A.K. Antony said crew members inside the Russian-built INS Sindhurakshak had died. He gave no details.

The explosion just after midnight was likely an accident, but an investigation was under way to establish the cause, the navy said.

“There are some people who are trapped on board, we are in the process of trying to rescue them,” said navy spokesman P.V.S. Satish. “We will not give up until we get to them.”

Photos distributed by social media users appeared to show a large fireball over the navy dock where the kilo-class diesel-electric submarine was berthed.

The incident, the worst ever for the navy’s sub-surface arm, raised memories of the explosion on the Russian nuclear attack submarine Kursk which sank to the bottom of the Barents Sea in 2000, killing all 118 crew members.

The Indian vessel, which returned from an upgrade in Russia earlier this year, had suffered a similar accident in 2010 in which one sailor was killed while it was docked in the southern port of Visakhapatnam.

Typically, such a submarine is fitted with torpedoes and missiles. Torpedoes are launched underwater to attack other submarines while missiles are used for long ranges above water. There was no immediate word on the status of the weapons on board the Sindhurakshak.

“Lot of things are in very close proximity, there is fuel, there is hydrogen, there is oxygen, there are weapons with high explosives on board,” said retired Indian navy chief Arun Prakash.

“So a slightest mistake or slightest accident can trigger off a huge accident. The question of sabotage – I mean, all possibilities have to be considered – but sabotage is probably the last possibility.”

AGEING FLEET

India’s navy has had far fewer accidents than the air force, dogged for years by crashes of Russian-made MiG-21 fighters.

However, the country’s fleet of 14 submarines is in urgent need of modernization and has been hampered by delays in government decisions as it battles corruption allegations.

Efforts to build a domestic arms industry to supply the military have made slow progress, with the country still the world’s largest importer.

Earlier this week a locally built aircraft carrier slipped into the sea, though it is not due for completion until 2017. The navy also announced that the reactor on its first indigenous nuclear submarine was now operational as part of a plan to build a powerful navy to counter China’s growing presence in the Indian Ocean.

INS Sindhurakshak completed a 2-1/2 year upgrade at a Russian shipyard a few months ago.

The vessel, which was fully operational with weapons on board, was half-submerged after the fire. A team of navy divers was mobilized to search for survivors and 16 fire tenders were brought in to put out the blaze, local media said.

“There was a loud explosion post midnight and I woke up,” said Dharmendra Jaiswal, who manages a public toilet opposite the naval dockyard. “I could see the skyline was bright and I could make out that some fire or blast had occurred inside.”

Three people who were near the submarine at the time of the explosion were injured and being treated in hospital, spokesman Satish said.

(Alters headline, first bullet point to eliminate redundant words)

(Additional reporting by Frank Jack Daniel and Sruthi Gottipati in NEW DELHI; Writing by John Chalmers and Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Ron Popeski)

Article from: reuters.com

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Indian sailors die after being trapped after explosion, fire on submarine

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