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Chinese sailor Guo Chuan missing in the Pacific Ocean

By Cao Jianjie and Ma Bangjie (Xinhua)    09:01, October 27, 2016

File Photo taken on Oct. 18, 2016 shows Chinese mariner Guo Chuan sailing his trimaran under San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, the United States. Guo Chuan trying to sail on a solo trans-Pacific voyage was missing off Hawaii, his support team said on Wednesday. All attempts to contact the vessel had failed and a rescue organization in Honolulu has sent a searching aircraft, which found the mainsail in water, broken off Guo's trimaran, but didn't see the sailor on the deck.(Xinhua)

BEIJING, Oct. 26 -- The support team for Chinese national Guo Chuan, who was on a solo trans-Pacific voyage, said on Wednesday that they have lost contact with the sailor for over 24 hours.

Guo was last heard just after 15:00 Tuesday Beijing time when his trimaran sailed 900 nautical miles off the west of Hawaii, his team said.

A search aircraft, sent from Honolulu, found the main sail in water, broken off the vessel, but didn't see Guo on the deck. All attempts to contact the sailor have failed, the team said.

The plane hovered over the vessel for one hour before returning to the base for lack of fuel.

The U.S. Navy has sent two search ships to the site of Guo's vessel, according to the team.

Guo set sail on his trimaran near the U.S. city of San Francisco on Oct. 19, embarking on a solo voyage to the Chinese city of Shanghai.

Guo, aiming to set a new solo non-stop trans-Pacific world record from San Francisco to Shanghai, piloted his trimaran, the "Qingdao China", west across the start line under San Francisco's iconic Golden Gate Bridge. His solo sailing is about 7,000 nautical miles in length and normally expected to be completed within 20 days.

The current trans-Pacific speed record is 21 days, set by crews on board the Italian Maserati.

Guo, who has set a world record for a 138-day solo non-stop circumnavigation, told a Xinhua reporter in an earlier interview that the greatest fear as a sailor was to fall in the water.

"I fear being separated from the ship when I am sailing solo," he said.

Guo recalled a brush with death in a 2011 trans-Atlantic race, saying he had survived a fall by grabbing a cable. "I was waist deep in the water. If hadn't grabbed the rope, I would had been thrown in the water. In that scenario, I would never catch up with the ship. My chance of survival would be none."

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(Web editor: Yuan Can, Bianji)

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