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The vessels collided shortly before 5 a.m. about 22 kilometers (14 miles) southwest of the island of Helgoland, Germany’s Central Command for Maritime Emergencies said.
The site of the collision was about 31 kilometers (19 miles) northeast of Langeoog island, which is just off the German mainland.
The British-flagged Verity, which had seven people on board and was en route from Bremen, Germany to the English port of Immingham, sank shortly after the collision. A signal from the ship was lost at about 5:20 a.m., suggesting that it had already gone down, and wreckage was found.
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“We are now doing everything humanly possible to rescue more people alive,” the head of the emergency command, Robby Renner, said at a news conference in Cuxhaven.
The water temperature at the time of the accident was about 12 degrees Celsius (54 Fahrenheit), which experience shows people can survive for about 20 hours, said Michael Ippich of the German Maritime Search and Rescue Service.
Several rescue ships and aircraft taking part in the search hadn’t located the missing crew members by mid-afternoon. Rescuers were considering the possibility that they were still inside the Verity, and planned to send divers down to the wreck at a depth of about 30 metres (98 metres) to check whether there are any signs of life, Renner said.
“The conditions on the spot are extremely difficult,” he said. “Because of the weather and visibility under water, it’s incredibly difficult to conduct such an operation.” The Verity was 91 metres (299 feet) long and 14 metres (46 feet) wide. It was carrying steel coils, according to Renner.
The other, bigger ship — the Bahamas-flagged Polesie — remained afloat and had 22 people on board. None of them was believed to be injured. The vessel was heading from Hamburg to A Coruna, Spain. The Polesie is 190 metres (623 feet) long and 29 metres (95 feet) wide.
There was no immediate word on the cause of the collision.
Vessels supporting the rescue effort included a cruise ship, the Iona, that was en route from Hamburg to Rotterdam and had doctors on board.