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Newly released footage reveals moment Nigerian crew member is rescued after surviving in air pocket of sunken tugboat
Ship's cook Harrison Okene spent three days under water after his tugboat sank off coast of Nigeria
Ship's cook Harrison Okene spent three days under water after his tugboat sank off the coast of Nigeria. Photograph: DCN Diving Group / Barcroft USA

Footage has emerged of the moment a ship's cook was rescued by divers after surviving for three days at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in an air pocket on a sunken tugboat.

Harrison Odjegba Okene, a Nigerian cook, survived by breathing an ever-dwindling supply of oxygen in an air pocket. As the temperature dropped to freezing, Okene, dressed only in boxer shorts, recited the last psalm his wife had sent by text message, sometimes called the Prayer for Deliverance: "Oh God, by your name, save me â€Ķ The Lord sustains my life."

Okene believes his rescue in May after 72 hours under water at a depth of 30 metres (about 100ft) is a sign of divine deliverance. The other 11 crew on board the Jascon 4 died when it sunk.

Divers sent to the scene were only looking for bodies, according to Tony Walker, project manager for the Dutch company DCN Diving, which was working on a neighboring oil field 75 miles (120km) away.

The divers had already pulled up four bodies. So when a hand appeared on the TV screen Walker was monitoring in the rescue boat, showing what the diver in the Jascon saw, everybody assumed it was another corpse.

"The diver acknowledged that he had seen the hand and then, when he went to grab the hand, the hand grabbed him," Walker said in a telephone interview on Tuesday.

"It was frightening for everybody," he said. "For the guy that was trapped because he didn't know what was happening. It was a shock for the diver while he was down there looking for bodies, and we [in the control room] shot back when the hand grabbed him on the screen."

Video footage released by DCN Diving

On the video, there's an exclamation of fear and shock from Okene's rescuer, and then joy as the realisation sets in. Okene recalls hearing: "There's a survivor! He's alive."

Walker said Okene couldn't have lasted much longer.

"He was incredibly lucky he was in an air pocket but he would have had a limited time [before] ... he wouldn't be able to breath anymore."

Okene was in the toilet at 4.30am on 26 Maywhen the tug, one of three towing an oil tanker in Nigeria's delta waters, gave a sudden lurch and then keeled over.

"I was dazed and everywhere was dark as I was thrown from one end of the small cubicle to another," Okene said in an interview with Nigeria's Nation newspaper.

He groped his way out of the toilet and tried to find a vent. He discovered some tools and a life vest with two flashlights, which he stuffed into his shorts. When he found a cabin that felt safe, he stayed put, getting colder as he played back a mental tape of his life.

He worried about the 10 Nigerians and the Ukrainian captain who would have locked themselves in their cabins as standard procedure in an area stalked by pirates..

As the water rose, Okene made a rack on top of a platform and piled two mattresses on top. He survived on one bottle of cola.

"I started calling on the name of God â€Ķ I started reminiscing on the verses I read before I slept. I read the Bible from Psalm 54 to 92. My wife had sent me the verses to read that night when she called me before I went to bed."

Okene thought he was going to die, he told the Nation, when he heard the sound of a boat engine and anchor dropping, but failed to get the attention of rescuers. He then waded across the cabin, stripped the wall to its steel body and banged on it with a hammer. But "I heard them moving away. They were far away from where I was."

By the time he was saved, relatives had already had been told the sailors were dead.

Okene was rescued by a diver who first used hot water to warm him up, then attached him to an oxygen mask. Once free of the boat, he was put into a decompression chamber and safely returned to the surface.

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This story has a particular poignant interest for me. My father was a cook on one of the bauxite boats travelling between Canada and MacKenzie. One day, whilst moored in Canada, my father went ashore and forgot to get back to the ship in time before it left harbour. A few days afterwards the ship sank in a storm and my father was declared dead. He was unfortunate to have left all his ID papers on the ship. So he got locked up by the Canadians as an illegal immigrant. At the same time the problems in Wismar broke out and we all fled to other parts of the world. It took me about 25 years before my father and I met up again in Europe.

Mr.T
Originally Posted by Mr.T:
when he went to grab the hand, the hand grabbed him," Walker said in a telephone interview on Tuesday.

"It was frightening for everybody," he said. "For the guy that was trapped because he didn't know what was happening. It was a shock for the diver while he was down there looking for bodies, and we [in the control room] shot back when the hand grabbed him on the screen."

I bet!

FM
Originally Posted by Mr.T:

This story has a particular poignant interest for me. My father was a cook on one of the bauxite boats travelling between Canada and MacKenzie. One day, whilst moored in Canada, my father went ashore and forgot to get back to the ship in time before it left harbour. A few days afterwards the ship sank in a storm and my father was declared dead. He was unfortunate to have left all his ID papers on the ship. So he got locked up by the Canadians as an illegal immigrant. At the same time the problems in Wismar broke out and we all fled to other parts of the world. It took me about 25 years before my father and I met up again in Europe.

wow!

FM

that fellow will never be the same again.  He will be like those soldiers who experienced an extended firefight and lived on the edge of fear for a long time.

 

I have a friend that rides with us and he used to fall a lot. After every ride he is always full of cuts and bruises. Once I asked him why he would not prefer we ride the bunny trails until he felt confident he can take the extreme ones. He said, riding those trails as we do is the only time he does not feel afraid because there he can completely forget the war zone field. These days he does not fall a lot but I worry he takes too much risk. He rides fearlessly where hardly anyone dare to go except with extreme caution.  It is all a part of the same syndrome

FM

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