The fleet ocean tug USNS Apache, crewed by members of the SIU Government Services Division, rescued seven fishermen whose canoes capsized in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Monrovia, Liberia on Aug. 14.
According to the U.S. Military Sealift Command (MSC), the 226-foot Apache was two nautical miles west of the harbor entrance when the ship came upon five men struggling in the water next to their canoe.
"Several of us saw the overturned boat and people in the water around 2:45 p.m.," Apache civil service master Capt. Charles Rodriguez told the agency. “I immediately called the chief mate to tell him to get out to the site as quickly as possible.”
AB Jeremy Guyet and Chief Mate Troy Bruemmer were in the harbor aboard the ship’s rigid hull inflatable boat observing pier repair operation when they received the call for help.
“They were on scene picking the first of the five victims out of the water within 10 minutes,” said Rodriguez. “They hauled the fisherman into the boat, huddled them together and covered them because they appeared to be in the first stages of hypothermia.”
Guyet and Bruemmer were transiting to the port with the canoe's crew when they saw two more fishermen struggling in the water. After rescuing them, the two crew members returned all seven men to dry land.
MSC reported that this was the second rescue operation in five days conducted by the Apache. Less than a week earlier, the ship also came to the aid of fellow mariners at the Port of Monrovia, putting out a fire that was raging aboard the foreign-flag commercial freighter Tahoma Reefer.
The Apache has been in Liberia’s capital city of Monrovia since Aug. 9. Sailors from the ship’s embarked Mobile Diving Salvage Unit Two conducted repairs on the Port of Monrovia’s commercial pier and surveyed the harbor.
The Apache is one of MSC’s four fleet ocean tugs that provide towing, diving platforms and other services to Navy combatant ships at sea. It also is one of MSC’s 33 Naval Fleet Auxiliary Force ships, which are civil service-crewed and provide underway replenishment and other direct support to Navy combatant ships at sea. The agency notes that these ships “allow Navy vessels to remain at sea, on station and able to perform their mission.”
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