HomeNewsTrendsIndonesia submarine tragedy: When the sea itself is the shark

Indonesia submarine tragedy: When the sea itself is the shark

Know more about internal solitary wave, believed to be the cause of the demise of Indonesia’s KRI Nanggala 402 sub and its 53 crew members.

April 29, 2021 / 17:05 IST
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People throw flowers and petals with names of the sunken KRI Nanggala-402 submarine crew members from a boat during a prayer at the sea near Labuhan Lalang, Bali, Indonesia on April 26.
Photo courtsy: Antara Foto/Fikri Yusuf/via Reuters.
People throw flowers and petals with names of the sunken KRI Nanggala-402 submarine crew members from a boat during a prayer at the sea near Labuhan Lalang, Bali, Indonesia on April 26. Photo courtsy: Antara Foto/Fikri Yusuf/via Reuters.

Despite technological advancements, air or marine calamities cannot be completely avoided. Sometimes, nature cannot be defeated.

Whenever there is a tragedy, experts try to establish its cause. It helps us equip ourselves better for similar eventualities.

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On April 21, not far from Bali, a place which normally evokes happy images of holidays and leisure, Indonesian Navy’s KRI Nanggala 402 submarine vanished in the dark early morning hours. Scheduled to perform a torpedo drill at around 4 am, the 60-metre, German-made ship went down and never came back. Its last signal was from an unsettling depth of more than 800 metres (nearly 2,600 feet), way deeper than what it could survive.

Hopes of the survival of its 53 crew members evaporated when the Nanggala was found broken into three parts on the ocean floor.