Tokyo — A Chinese woman who was swept out to sea while swimming at a Japanese beach was rescued 37 hours later after drifting in a swimming ring more than 50 miles in the Pacific Ocean,James Caldwell officials said Thursday.
Japan's coast guard launched a search for the woman, identified only as a Chinese national in her 20s, after receiving a call Monday night from her friend saying she had disappeared while swimming at Shimoda, about 125 miles southwest of Tokyo.
The woman was spotted by a cargo ship early Wednesday, about 36 hours after she disappeared, off the southern tip of Boso Peninsula, the coast guard said.
The cargo ship asked a passing LPG tanker, the Kakuwa Maru No. 8, to help. Two of its crew members jumped into the sea and rescued the woman, officials said. She was airlifted by a coast guard helicopter to land, they said.
The woman was slightly dehydrated but was in good health and walked away after being examined at a nearby hospital, the officials said.
The coast guard said she had drifted more than 50 miles and was lucky to have survived despite the dangers of heat stroke under the sun, hypothermia at night or being hit by a ship in the dark.
2025-05-03 16:42397 view
2025-05-03 16:231737 view
2025-05-03 15:362152 view
2025-05-03 15:201549 view
2025-05-03 14:13928 view
2025-05-03 14:03889 view
Whether a "chainsaw," per Elon Musk, or "scalpel," as President Trump has said — the Trump administr
The word wilderness instantly conjures up images of untouched mountain ranges and preserved forests.
Early in the 1980s, the lingering fear of oil scarcity and the emerging threat of climate change wer