Tag Archives: rescues

Colombian navy rescues man who survived on ketchup for weeks lost at sea



CNN
 — 

A man who spent 24 days adrift in the Caribbean Sea says he survived by eating little more than ketchup.

Elvis Francois, 47, was found 120 nautical miles northwest of Colombia’s Puerto Bolívar after a plane saw the word “help” engraved on the hull of his sailboat, the Colombian navy said in a statement Thursday.

“I had no food. It was just a bottle of ketchup that was on the boat, garlic powder and Maggi (stock cubes) so I mixed it up with some water,” Francois said in a video provided by the Colombian army.

Francois, from the island nation of Dominica, said he had been making repairs to his boat near the Dutch part of the island of Saint Martin in December when adverse weather conditions pulled his boat out to sea.

He said he lacked navigational knowledge and was unable to maneuver his boat back to shore – spending weeks lost at sea.

“Twenty four days – no land, nobody to talk to. Don’t know what to do, don’t know where you are. It was rough,” he said. “At a certain time, I lose hope. I think about my family.”

After being rescued, he was transferred to the port city of Cartagena where he received medical care and was later handed over to immigration authorities for his return home, Colombian officials said.

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Coast Guard rescues man who went overboard on Carnival cruise ship

A 28-year-old man who went overboard while on a Carnival cruise ship in the Gulf of Mexico was rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard almost 20 hours after he was reported missing.

The guest, according to a representative with Carnival Cruise Line, was at a bar with his sister on the Carnival Valor and left to use the bathroom at around 11 p.m. Wednesday night. He never returned and his sister reported him missing the following day. The Coast Guard received the call at approximately 2:30 p.m. Thursday.

Carnival crew searched the ship Thursday but were unsuccessful, later deciding to retrace the ship’s route to find the missing guest.

In this March 3, 2022 file photo The Carnival Valor cruise ship sets sail from the Port of New Orleans in New Orleans.

Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images, FILE

The U.S. Coast Guard assisted the Carnival crew with search and rescue and told ABC News they found the man in the water shortly after 8 p.m. Thursday. He was rescued approximately 20 hours since he was last seen.

The man was reported to be in stable condition, the U.S. Coast Guard said Friday.

“The Jayhawk aircrew hoisted the man onto the helicopter and transferred him to awaiting emergency medical services at the New Orleans Lakefront Airport,” a statement from the Coast Guard read.

The ship was on its way to Cozumel, a Mexican island in the Caribbean, and was released by the Coast Guard to continue to its destination.

“We are beyond grateful that this case ended with a positive outcome,” said Lt. Seth Gross, a Sector New Orleans search and rescue mission coordinator. “It took a total team effort from Coast Guard watchstanders, response crews, and our professional maritime partners operating in the Gulf of Mexico to locate the missing individual and get him to safety. If not for the alert crew aboard the motor vessel Crinis, this case could have had a much more difficult ending.”

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US Coast Guard rescues Carnival Cruise ship passenger reported missing in Gulf of Mexico

(CNN) — In the first hours after the Carnival Valor set sail from New Orleans on Thanksgiving eve, a brother and sister set off for a place apropos of a holiday mood: They headed to an onboard bar.

Predictably, the man at one point stepped away to use the restroom.

But he didn’t come back.

Hours passed.

He wasn’t in his stateroom.

The 28-year-old had, quite simply, vanished.

What happened next has astonished at least one seasoned mariner who, with hours of hindsight, declared the stunning outcome unlike anything he’s ever witnessed — and nothing short of “one of those Thanksgiving miracles.”

A search is launched by air and sea

It was around 11 p.m. when her brother walked off, the sister recalled, Carnival spokesperson Matt Lupoli told CNN on Thursday in a statement.

At noon the next day — Thanksgiving Day — she reported him missing, the statement said. Officials haven’t identified either one.

Announcements echoed through the ship for the missing passenger to check in with guest services, passenger Mike Anderson CNN on Thursday, and people “noticed security starting to search the boat with a photo of the missing (passenger) in their phones.”

At around 2 p.m., a final check-in request was issued, he said.

Passengers were told the arrival time to their port of call in Cozumel, Mexico, would be delayed, Anderson said, but no official announcement went out about what had happened.

The ship, he said, then turned around.

“Carnival Valor retraced its route to support the search and rescue,” Lupoli explained.

Then around 2:30 p.m., the Coast Guard got a call from the ship, Coast Guard Lt. Phillip VanderWeit said in a statement.

A cruise passenger was missing.

Soon, a multi-crew search for the man — by air and by sea — was underway, he said.

A 200-mile zone and a critical mission

An alert went out to all mariners in the gulf, and the Coast Guard “launched all available resources,” Lt. Seth Gross, a search and rescue coordinator for the USCG told CNN on Friday morning.

That included a small boat from Venice, Florida, a helicopter based in New Orleans and airplanes from Clearwater, Florida, and Mobile, Alabama, he said.

The search extended more than 200 miles in the gulf, Gross said, adding the water temperature there Thursday night was just above 70 degrees — and somewhat colder in the Mississippi River.

Given the time difference between when the man was last seen and when the Coast Guard was alerted, “we knew that communication with the mariners in the Gulf of Mexico was going to be critical,” Gross said.

The mission intensified.

About 20 miles south of Southwest Pass, Louisiana, the crew of bulk carrier CRINIS was scanning the water, the Coast Guard said Friday in a news release.

Then, around 8:25 p.m., they spotted something.

‘Unlike anything I’ve been part of’

It was the man.

A Coast Guard MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter aircrew out of New Orleans headed to the spot — and “hoisted the man onto the helicopter,” VanderWeit said.

And he was responsive, USCG Petty Officer Ryan Graves said.

“He was able to identify his name, confirmed that he was the individual that fell overboard,” Gross told CNN’s Boris Sanchez on Friday afternoon. “He was showing signs of hypothermia, shock, dehydration” but could walk and communicate.

He “gave no really no clear indication of why he fell overboard or what time specifically,” he added.

“The fact that he was able to keep himself afloat and above the surface of the water for such an extended period of time, it’s just something you can’t take for granted and certainly something that’ll stick with me forever,” Gross said.

Rescuers haven’t been able to determine exactly how long he was in the water, Gross told “CNN This Morning” — but it could have been more than 15 hours.

If it was that long, it’s “the absolute longest that I’ve heard about — and just one of those Thanksgiving miracles,” he said.

In his 17-year career, “this case is unlike anything I’ve been a part of,” Gross said. “I think it kind of blows the norm, the normalcy, out of the water here, and really just shows the will to live is something that you need to account for in every search-and-rescue case.”

“If not for the alert crew aboard the motor vessel CRINIS, this case could have had a much more difficult ending,” he said in the news release. “It took a total team effort from Coast Guard watchstanders, response crews, and our professional maritime partners operating in the Gulf of Mexico to locate the missing individual and get him to safety.”

The rescued man was transferred to awaiting emergency medical personnel at New Orleans Lakefront Airport, Graves said.

He’s being evaluated at a hospital, Gross said, and was reported in stable condition late Friday morning by the Coast Guard.

Back aboard the Carnival Valor, an announcement Thursday evening over the PA system informed guests there had been a man-overboard incident, Anderson said.

The ship, though, had been released from the search, Anderson recalled hearing, and again was sailing toward Cozumel.

CNN’s Melissa Alonso, Dave Alsup, Amanda Jackson, Jose Lesh and Theresa Waldrop contributed to this report.

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Harrowing rescues save migrants off Greece; at least 22 die

KYTHIRA, Greece (AP) — Bodies floated amid splintered wreckage in the wind-tossed waters off a Greek island Thursday as the death toll from the separate sinkings of two migrant boats rose to 22, with many still missing.

The vessels went down hundreds of miles apart, in one case prompting a dramatic overnight rescue effort as island residents and firefighters pulled shipwrecked migrants to safety up steep cliffs.

The shipwrecks further stoked tension between neighbors Greece and Turkey, who are locked in a heated dispute over maritime boundaries and migration.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis voiced “deep sorrow for the tragic loss of life,” and praised rescuers’ “heroic” efforts.

“This is a time to really cooperate much more substantially in order to avoid these types of incidents occurring in the future and to completely eradicate the smugglers who prey upon innocent people” trying to reach Europe in unseaworthy boats, Mitsotakis added.

The coast guard on Greece’s eastern island of Lesbos said the bodies of 16 young African women, a man and a boy were recovered after a dinghy carrying about 40 people sank. Ten women were rescued, while 12 other migrants were believed to be missing, coast guard officials said.

The last body to be recovered, of a man, was found by divers from the European Union’s Frontex border agency who helped in the search and rescue operation, the coast guard said.

“The women who were rescued were in a full state of panic so we are still trying to work out what happened,” coast guard spokesman Nikos Kokkalas told Greek state television. “The women were all from African countries, aged 20 upward. … There is a search on land as well as at sea, and we hope that survivors made it to land.”

The second rescue effort was launched several hundred kilometers (miles) to the southwest, off the island of Kythira, where a sailboat struck rocks and sank.

The bodies of at least four migrants were seen amid floating debris from the yacht under the cliffs. The deaths would be officially recorded when the bodies were recovered, officials said. They added that 80 people, from Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan, had been rescued while a search continues for as many as 11 still believed to be missing.

With winds in the area reaching 70 kilometers per hour (45 mph) overnight on Kythira, survivors clinging to ropes were pulled to safety up steep cliffs as others were buffeted by waves as they waited their turn on tiny areas of rock at the bottom.

“All the residents here went down to the harbor to try and help,” Martha Stathaki, a local resident told The Associated Press.

“We could see the boat smashing against the rocks and people climbing up those rocks to try and save themselves. It was an unbelievable sight.”

Kythira is some 400 kilometers (250 miles) west of Turkey and on a route often used by smugglers to bypass Greece and head directly to Italy.

A volatile dispute is taking place between Greece and Turkey over the safety of migrants at sea, with Athens accusing its neighbor of failing to stop smugglers active on its shoreline and even using migrants to apply political pressure on the European Union.

Most migrants who reach Greece travel from nearby Turkey, but smugglers have changed routes — often taking greater risks — in recent months in an effort to avoid heavily patrolled waters around eastern Greek islands near the Turkish coastline.

“Once again, Turkey’s tolerance of gangs of ruthless traffickers has cost human lives,” Greek Shipping Minister Yannis Plakiotakis said.

“As long as the Turkish coastguard does not prevent their activities, the traffickers cram unfortunate people, without safety measures, into boats that cannot withstand the weather conditions, putting their lives in mortal danger.”

Turkey denies the allegations and has publicly accused Greece of carrying out reckless summary deportations, known as pushbacks.

Speaking at the United Nations General Assembly last month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, accused Greece of “turning the Aegean Sea into a graveyard” and held up photographs of dead migrant children. ___ Follow AP’s coverage of global migration: https://apnews.com/hub/migration

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Hurricane Ian survival stories: Narrow escapes, harrowing rescues, floodwater fish

FORT MYERS, Fla. — Kathy Sharp believed she would be safe at the Thunderbird Park, a mobile home community for retirees dotted with palm trees two miles from the Gulf of Mexico. For days, forecasters had indicated Hurricane Ian was heading toward Tampa.

But as the storm shifted and tore through Fort Myers, Sharp looked out a window and noticed pieces of her neighbor’s roof flying into the air. Not long after, her own home started to break apart, the fierce wind casting aluminum paneling into the swirl of airborne debris.

“It was just like a river out of nowhere,” said Sharp, 74, describing the apocalyptic storm surge. “There was nothing there, and then all the sudden there was like a foot of water in the house.”

Frightened, Sharp and her husband, Lonny Henry, frantically called 911. Even before a dispatcher picked up, however, the couple knew no one would be coming to their rescue.

Harrowing stories of survival surfaced across southwest Florida on Thursday as first responders rescued hundreds of people from homes turned into islands surrounded by still-deep floodwater. One elderly woman recounted how the water rose so high she had just six inches of space in which to breathe. A couple described looking out a window and seeing several large fish swimming by.

Many described being caught off guard — settling in as Ian approached with supplies of nonperishable food, water and generators on hand, only to find out that their homes were no match for the storm.

In communities near Fort Myers Beach, the water was so forceful it collapsed buildings, tumbled concrete walls, and pushed sailboats and dumpsters hundreds of feet. At one gas station, a large boat ended up parked next to a gas pump, as if ready to fill up. Scores were still waiting to be rescued from trailer parks, residential subdivisions and luxury waterfront apartment complexes in a part of the state that is home to a large senior citizen population.

Everett Bailey, 56, said he was asleep on a couch and woke up to see water starting to spill into his one-story home. He immediately waded through the flood to get his car.

“The water was in the car, too,” he said. “But my car started, and I drove it to the church.”

He returned home when the water receded to find his waterlogged belongings ruined.

How climate change is rapidly fueling super hurricanes

A few doors away, Anne Dalton, 70, considers herself lucky that the flood stopped inches short from reaching the interior of the house her family has owned since the 1980s. But as she watched the murky water swirl around her house Thursday, Dalton said she nonetheless experienced the scariest night of her life.

“The weird thing is it was like a river of currents, and it was not calm water at all,” she said. “It was pulsating, and it was pulsating under the water, too. It was very frightening, because we couldn’t go anywhere. We would have just fallen down.”

At one point, Dalton’s husband, Oliver Martin, looked outside and saw a school of fish.

“They were not small,” Martin, 75 said. “There was eight- to 12-inch fish swimming by.”

In another subdivision off McGregor Boulevard — a main transit route from Fort Myers to Fort Myers Beach — Laurent Boce, 58, estimated that Ian brought a 13-foot storm toward his home, which sits at about 11-feet above sea level.

“It was just like five, six hours of pure madness,” said Boce, who was essentially trapped in his subdivision on Thursday as parts of the street remained under two feet of water. “I was able to sit in a chair and just watch the water and debris come in, in, in.”

Boce’s neighbor, Karen More, 69, said she will never again underestimate a hurricane.

As she watched floodwaters carry debris down her street, the wind began shaking her door.

“I was holding my front door, because of the wind, and I didn’t know what else to do,” she said. “I didn’t know what else to do. I thought the ocean was going to come through.”

In downtown Fort Myers, the Caloosahatchee River spilled over, inundating several blocks inland. In neighborhoods closer to the Gulf of Mexico, the water rose so high against structures — especially trailers — it knocked over interior walls, said Myke Hastings of Gulf Search and Rescue, a Texas-based team, as he attempted to check up on stranded residents in one trailer park.

Maps show the impact of Hurricane Ian

He recalled rescuing a 77-year-old woman in a lifejacket who said she had just six inches of space between the floodwaters and her ceiling.

“She was trapped,” Hastings said. “We had to dig her out. Everything had collapsed around her, and she couldn’t get out of her trailer even though the water had receded.”

About 25 miles to the north, in Punta Gorda, the wind rattled residents at Creekside RV Park, who said Hurricane Ian’s eye passed directly over them.

Deborah Clark, 57, and her husband have lived in their 40-foot trailer for the past two years while they build a house nearby.

About 8 a.m. Wednesday, Clark woke up as her unit began shaking.

“My gut said, ‘This is bad,’ ” said Clark, who had not the expected the winds to pick up so soon.

She rushed to the community’s clubhouse, which she said was built to withstand a Category 5 hurricane. Within a few hours, 30 other residents were huddled inside. For the next six hours, they watched from windows as Hurricane Ian flipped over their trailers.

“It sounded like planes flying overhead,” Clark said. “But you knew this wasn’t planes. And then you could almost hear a whistling sound.”

When the wind subsided, residents discovered that about 40 of the 50 recreational vehicles that had been parked at the site had been turned upside down or destroyed. One was pushed into a pond.

“For most of the people, these are their homes,” said Erik Clark, Deborah’s husband. “Everything they own is in these campers.”

The Clarks said they decided not to evacuate Punta Gorda ahead of the storm because it was initially forecast to make landfall near Tampa. When they realized Tuesday that the forecasts had changed, Erik Clark said he worried that roads would be cluttered with traffic.

Many said they won’t hesitate to leave next time a powerful hurricane rolls in.

As the floodwaters seeped into her home Wednesday, Sharp and her husband watched from a kitchen table and prayed while trying to stay as clam as possible.

“We were just sitting there in the water,” she said, adding “this storm made me a true believer” of the power of wind and water.

When they did peek out the window, the couple saw “roofs going by and insulation” floating down the street. At one point, a neighbor’s washing machine was sucked out of a home. Another neighbor’s 600-pound toolbox floated away.

“By midnight, it was pretty much done,” Henry, Clark’s husband, said. “And when we got up this morning, we started to cleaning up.”

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Kentucky flooding: Man rescues 5 children and 2 of his former school teachers from flooded homes

Day, a former coal miner who lives in Hindman, Knott County, said he was unaware of what was happening in the region until he received the message saying the children needed help getting out of their house.

“I didn’t know what they was talking about, then I went outside,” Day told CNN. “You heard a lot of people screaming and begging for anyone to help.”

That day, Eastern Kentucky saw flooding that officials have called unprecedented, with entire houses and bridges swept away and communities isolated because of flooded roads. At least 35 people have died in the flooding, and many who survived lost everything they had. Hundreds of people are still missing.

Day and his wife, Krystal, had no boat, so they waded through the water to help save the five children and two mothers who were stuck on the roof of their home.

“At 3 o’clock in the morning, I was in that water with my wife. I put a child under each arm and one around my neck and took them back to my house. The oldest child was holding a small dog,” Day said.

After Day and his wife rescued the children and the two women, he set his sights on rescuing his former high school English teacher, Ella Prater, and his second grade teacher, Irma Gayheart, who both lived nearby.

“I just kept pacing back and forth because I saw the water rising and I knew my two former teachers were probably trapped in their houses,” Day said. “It was heartbreaking.”

He then enlisted the help of three other neighbors to help check on his teachers, who both live alone, according to Day.

When they saw Prater, Day said they held her “by both side of her arms and never looked back. We said, ‘We have to go.'”

It took Gayheart a few minutes to answer the door, but when she did, she told him she was okay, but had been sitting on her kitchen counter top watching the water rise.

“I wasn’t going to leave her there because she’s a special lady to me. You could tell by looking at her face that she was drained,” Day said. “She spent the night on the kitchen counter top and the water was up by the counter top.”

With the help of his neighbors, Day was able to reunite both teachers with their families, who were waiting for any updates about their whereabouts.

“These are two of the most special women you’ll meet in your life, and when they show you love, they show you true love. They truly care about everyone that’s around them and that stuck with me my whole life,” Day said when explaining why he risked his life to rescue his teachers.

The ordeal has been emotionally draining, but he’s glad the children and former teachers are safe, Day told CNN.

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Universal Studios power outage leaves passengers stranded on ride

Some thrill-seekers at Universal Studios Hollywood got more excitement than they bargained for Thursday when 11 people had to be rescued from a ride that stalled in a power outage.

A power outage caused the amusement park patrons to be stuck on the Transformers 3D attraction, which bills itself as “the greatest battle you’ll ever ride,” according to ABC 7 in Los Angeles.

The ride ground to a halt around 3:45 p.m. and 11 customers needed to be evacuated. The passengers were not injured during the malfunction.

The park’s Harry Potter ride was also reportedly affected.

“As a result of a power interruption from So Cal Edison, we experienced a brief power dip which resulted in exiting guests from some attractions,” Universal Studios said, according to the affiliate.

“Power has been fully restored and we’re working to get a few remaining attractions back online. The theme park remains open.”

Firefighters evacuate people from Universal Studios.
FOX 11

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My iPhone saved my life – everyone needs to learn the ‘5 click’ trick

A Brit who plunged into a crevasse while snowboarding has told the incredible story of how his iPhone saved his life.

Tim Blakely, 41, was boarding 10,000 feet up a Swiss mountain off-piste and alone when he fell 15 feet down a hidden gap in the ice.

He would have dropped further and likely died had he not landed on a fragile snow bridge below.

Writing on Instagram on March 27, Tim described how his iPhone’s Emergency SOS feature came to his rescue.

Activated using a few quick button presses, the tool automatically calls the local emergency number and sends them your location.

“This past week has been a wave of emotions and introspection and I’ve not really known what to do with this experience,” Tim wrote.

“Thank you to @apple, their side button five click to emergency services – especially great when your screen is constantly being dripped on.”

Despite finding himself several feet below the surface of the ice, Tim said he still had a 3G connection.

His mobile was able to alert Swiss rescue services to his position even though he only had three percent of his battery power left.

It apparently took him 20 minutes to get hold of someone.

Tim said that he has now returned to London “relatively unharmed.”
Instagram/@mrtimblakey

They told him not to move and, following the call, the New Zealand-born adrenaline-junky gingerly took photos of what could have easily been his final resting place.

Forty-five minutes later, rescuers were able to haul the personal trainer out of the crevasse and he escaped the ordeal with only an injured ankle ligament.

Tim said that he has now returned to London “relatively unharmed”.

Tim said that his phone saved his life and the thought of not having access to it at the time has been “keeping me up at night”.

He advised others not to be so careless.

“Seventeen years snowboarding, and the majority of those times spending a lot of the time solo and off-piste. Never solo again.”

“No matter how experienced you think you are, it is no joke.”

“I was lured into a false sense of security which also led me to be very blasé about researching the areas I snowboard.”

He added: “It’s not fair to say ‘my luck ran out’ because the circumstances of my survival clearly show I’ve cashed in every last luck token at my disposal.”

How to make an SOS call on iPhone

After the call ends, your iPhone will ping the emergency service with your current location, unless you choose to cancel.

On iPhones without a Home Button.

  1. Press and hold the side button and one of the volume buttons until the Emergency SOS slider appears.
  2. Drag the Emergency SOS slider to call emergency services. If you continue to hold down the side button and Volume button, instead of dragging the slider, a countdown begins and an alert sounds.
  3. If you hold down the buttons until the countdown ends, your iPhone automatically calls emergency services.

On iPhone 7 or earlier:

  1. Rapidly press the side button five times. The Emergency SOS slider will appear.
  2. Drag the Emergency SOS slider to call emergency services.
  3. If you started an emergency call by accident, press the Stop button, then tap Stop Calling.

After the call ends, your iPhone will ping the emergency service with your current location, unless you choose to cancel.

If Location Services is off, it will temporarily turn on.

His mobile was able to alert Swiss rescue services to his position even though he only had three per cent of his battery power left.
Instagram/@mrtimblakey

If your location changes, your contacts will get an update, and you’ll get a notification about 10 minutes later.

To stop the updates, tap the status bar and select “Stop Sharing Emergency Location.”

If you keep sharing, you’ll get a reminder to stop every four hours for 24 hours.

This story originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced here with permission.



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Cargo ship sinks in Persian Gulf off Iran

A massive cargo ship carrying cars sank in the Persian Gulf Thursday amid treacherous seas, authorities said.

The United Arab Emirates-flagged vessel, the Al Salmy 6, sank off Iran’s southern coast with 30 crew members aboard. Iranian rescue workers saved 16 of the crew and another 11 survivors got onto life rafts, Capt. Nizar Qaddoura of the Dubai-based Salem Al Makrani Cargo company said.

Another person was retrieved from the choppy seas by a nearby tanker, but two crew members were still in the sea, Qaddoura said. Rescue efforts were underway, but were hampered by bad weather.

The cargo ship, which is longer than a soccer field, capsized roughly 30 miles off the coast of Asaluyeh in Iran, according to its Ports & Maritime Organization.

Photos showed the ship, which departed Dubai days earlier, tilted dramatically onto its side at a precarious angle before becoming fully submerged. Its crew consists of nationals from Sudan, India, Pakistan, Uganda, Tanzania and Ethiopia, Qaddoura said.

The Al Salmy 6 sank off Iran’s southern coast with 30 crew members aboard.
Iran Ports Organization/WANA/Handout via REUTERS
Iranian rescue workers saved 16 of the crew and another 11 survivors got onto life rafts.
Iran Ports Organization/WANA/Handout via REUTERS
The cargo ship was carrying cars and is longer than a soccer field.
Iran Ports Organization/WANA/Handout via REUTERS

The US Navy’s 5th Fleet, which patrols the Mideast, did not immediately return a request for comment, the Associated Press reported.

Severe weather descended onto the Persian Gulf Wednesday — with wind gusts exceeding 40 mph and high seas. Iran’s Meteorological Organization issued a “red alert” earlier this week, warning of possible impact to maritime activities through Saturday.

With Post wires

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Americans rescued from Afghanistan, en route to New York

Thirty-nine American citizens and lawful permanent residents that were left behind in Afghanistan by the Biden administration were evacuated Friday and are headed to the Big Apple. 

The evacuees, which include more than a dozen kids, the youngest of whom is an 11-month-old American citizen, were rescued from the Taliban-controlled locale by Project Dynamo, a volunteer, civilian group led by former Military members and current Military Reserves soldiers, the organization said in a news release. 

“This is the first known major airlift rescue with American boots on the ground since the U.S. government abandoned the country of Afghanistan in August,” James Judge, a spokesman for the organization, said in a statement. 

“Despite their difficulties, we are doing this because it is the right thing to do when another human is in need and because our fellow Americans should never be left behind.”

Bryan Stern, a founder of Project DYNAMO, holds the evacuee’s passports at the airport.
Courtesy of Project DYNAMO

Two members of Project Dynamo, Bryan Stern and Abdul Wasit, flew into Afghanistan from an undisclosed country in the region earlier this week and with help from a small team of volunteers, brought the evacuees to a safe house near Kabul.

Once there, there, they were given COVID-19 vaccines and other necessary vaccinations along with PCR tests, the group said. 

The evacuees were then loaded up in vehicles and escorted to Kabul International Airport where they boarded two flights chartered by Berry Aviation around 4 p.m. local time. 

The evacuees were given COVID-19 PCR tests prior to boarding planes to leave Kabul.
Courtesy of Project DYNAMO

The evacuees have all passed a preliminary inspection by the State Department but will need to clear customs after they arrive at JFK Airport Saturday morning, the group said. The State Department did not return a request for comment and couldn’t confirm if they conducted clearance checks. 

Stern, a co-founder of Project Dynamo, said this is the first evacuation that’s been pulled off without the use of a refugee camp since the Taliban took control of the country following President Biden’s sloppy, and widely panned, withdrawal. 

“No American or Permanent Resident should be forced to stay in a refugee camp while attempting to return to their own families, homes and communities in the United States,” Stern said in a statement. 

The American evacuees board a bus en route to the airport to leave Afghanistan.
Courtesy of Project DYNAMO

The group claims to have rescued more than 2,000 Americans and lawful permanent residents from Afghanistan since Kabul fell “safely and legally” but the Department of Defense and the White House couldn’t confirm if they were aware of the group and didn’t return requests for comment. 

Following the military’s haphazard withdrawal from Afghanistan, President Joe Biden claimed there were just 100 to 200 American citizens left behind in the country but earlier this month, the State Department showed that number was much larger.

Since Aug. 31, the agency said 479 citizens and 450 lawful permanent residents have managed to get out with their assistance and that they’re “in touch with fewer than a dozen U.S. citizens” who want to leave and have the needed travel documents to do so. 

The group claims to have rescued more than 2,000 Americans and lawful permanent residents from Afghanistan since Kabul fell.
Courtesy of Project DYNAMO
A Project DYNAMO reviews the manifest prior to leaving Afghanistan.
Courtesy of Project DYNAMO
Thirty-nine American citizens and lawful permanent residents that were left behind in Afghanistan by the Biden administration en route to the airport to leave Afghanistan.
Courtesy of Project DYNAMO

As the US military prepared to leave Afghanistan in August, it took just 11 days for the Taliban to regain control of the country following 20 years of occupation — a feat Biden said was “highly unlikely”.

Since then, the locale has been plunged into chaos. Afghans have reported that they are starving and unable to purchase food while some have been forced to sell their children so they can support the rest of their family. 

Recently, an Afghan volleyball player on the girls’ national team was beheaded by the Taliban after she spoke out about the risks female athletes face in the country. In October, photos emerged that showed the Taliban was again conducting public hangings — a shocking display reminiscent of the Islamic militant group’s brutal regime of decades past.

Additional reporting by Steven Nelson

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