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Australia Sends Icebreaker to Rescue Stricken Antarctic Researcher
Sydney, Australia | AFP | Sunday 9/3/2023 - 00:31 UTC-5 | 251 words
An Australian icebreaker was sailing to Antarctica on a rescue mission Sunday to evacuate a researcher with a "developing medical condition" from a remote station.
Icebreaker RSV Nuyina departed from Tasmania last week to rescue an unnamed individual from Casey, a research base on the frozen continent 3,443 kilometers (2,139 miles) south of the Australian Antarctic Division headquarters in Hobart, Tasmania state, the Australian Antarctic Program said.
The researcher "requires specialist medical assessment and care in Australia for a developing medical condition," a program spokesperson said. The name of the researcher’s condition was not given.
The ship has a top speed of around 16 knots, meaning the rescue could take several days.
The Nuyina was equipped with helicopters on board to help the evacuation effort, the spokesperson said in a statement Saturday.
The researcher's family is being kept informed of the situation, the statement said, adding that "the wellbeing of our people is our highest priority."
There is an aerodrome 70 kilometers (44 miles) from Casey, but it can only be used during the southern hemisphere summer months due to extreme weather, the Australian Antarctic Program said.
Up to 160 researchers visit the base at Casey in the summer, according to its website, but only around 20 people remain on the station during the winter months to perform maintenance work.
The division said all other personnel at Casey were “accounted for and safe.”