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WWI German submarine found off Belgian coast with 23 bodies inside

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
WWI German submarine found off Belgian coast with 23 bodies inside
The submarine found off the Belgian coast is probably the same type as the one in this historical photo - type UB II. Photo: Tomas Termote/DPA.

Divers have found a well-preserved wreck of a German submarine sunk during the First World War in the North Sea, Belgian officials said on Tuesday. The bodies of its crew members were found aboard the vessel as well.

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“The submarine remains closed and there are 23 people still onboard,” Western Flanders Governor Carl Decaluwe told the Associated Press.

It is the 11th German submarine from the 1914-18 war to be found in Belgian waters and the best-preserved example to date, Thomas Termote, a diver and expert in marine archaeology who found the wreck this summer, told AFP.

"We thought that all the big wrecks had already been discovered so this was a total surprise," Termote said.

Its exact location is being kept secret to deter treasure-hunters.

He said the wreck - a UB-II type torpedo armed boat - was 27 metres long with the rear end partly detached.

"The submarine is very intact, everything is still closed - that's what he (Termote) saw during his first visit this summer," said Jan Mees, head of the Flanders Marine Institute.

The German embassy in Belgium had been informed, Belga news agency reported.

Sea grave

During WWI, the German navy used the Belgian port of Zeebrugge as a base for its submarines, known as U-boats, to attack shipping in the North Sea.

To combat the U-boat threat, the British tried to block Zeebrugge port in April 1918 by scuttling old ships in the entry channel.

The first indications of the wreck came in 2015 when a sonar ship found signs of a large wreck off Ostend.

Termote, who lives in the town, carried out further investigations on his own initiative.

A further dive is planned soon to clean some of the outside and check its identification number, Mees said.

German authorities could then check it against their record and contact the families of the deceased.

"If the Germans want to get the bodies back it's possible, but highly unlikely," Mees added.

Termote said the wreck would be "nearly impossible" to refloat and would therefore be "considered a sea grave for the sailors."

Germany lost around 1,200 men in 70 U-boats off the Belgian coast during four years - out of a total of 93 stationed in Flanders.

Its base was in the medieval city of Bruges, 12 kilometres from the coast but linked to the sea at Ostend and Zeebrugge by canals.

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