Uruguay losing hope for 22 missing from sunken S Korean ore carrier

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Uruguay losing hope for 22 missing from sunken S Korean ore carrier

Montevideo, Uruguay (Reuters): Uruguay's navy said on Sunday it was losing hope of finding alive any of 22 crew members missing two days after a South Korean ore carrier sank in the South Atlantic but was still continuing the search, a Navy spokesman said.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported that two Filipino crew members have been rescued floating in a life raft on Saturday, but other lifeboats and rafts found in the area were empty.

A spokesman for the Uruguayan Navy Gaston Jaunsolo told Reuters, "The more hours pass, the less the chances are of finding them."

He said a Brazilian plane had flown over the area on Sunday morning and an Argentine war ship was due to join the search efforts. The ship sank on Friday some 3,700 kilometers (2,300 miles) off Uruguay's coast, Jaunsolo said.

Eight of the missing are South Korean nationals and 14 are Filipinos.

The news agency reported that the very large ore carrier (VLOC) Stellar Daisy owned and operated by South Korea's Polaris Shipping based in Busan was sailing from Brazil to China carrying iron ore when it sent a distress signal to the ship operator on Friday,.

A message last received on Friday by Polaris from a crew member said the ship was taking in water on the port side and was listing rapidly, Yonhap said.