Canadian students rescued off Brazilian coast
Dozens of Canadian students have been plucked safely from the South Atlantic Ocean after their class-at-sea sailing ship sank of the coast of Brazil, authorities said Friday.
All 64 students and crew on a Canadian ship that sank 300 miles from the Brazilian coast have been rescued, a Canadian air force officer said Friday afternoon.
The Canadians were aboard the West Island College Class Afloat school ship Concordia as part of a 10-month accredited high school and university program. The ship was traveling between Recife, Brazil, and Montevideo, Uruguay.
The Concordia, a 57-metre sailing school, is owned by West Island College International with offices in Lunenburg, N.S. The vessel went down about 500 kilometres southeast of Rio de Janeiro.
The head of the school, Kate Knight, said the 64 people included 48 students in grades 11 and 12 and first-year university.
“It’s a tragedy to lose a ship, but a victory that they were rescued,” said Maj. Denis McGuire of the Canadian Joint Rescue and Coordinating Center.
The students and crew had been aboard three lifeboats in the Atlantic Ocean and were picked up by two nearby merchant vessels, McGuire said. The Canadians will be transferred to a Brazilian navy ship and taken to shore, McGuire said.
Brazilian media reported that the transfer will be done by helicopter.
The Concordia started sending out a distress signal Thursday, West Island College said on its Web site. It was not immediately known when or why it sank.
The ship left Recife on February 8 and was scheduled to dock in Montevideo next week, the Brazilian navy said in a news release.
The school’s website says the Concordia was built in 1992 and “meets all of the international requirements for safety.”
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