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WELLINGTON, New Zealand A New Zealand meteorologist took the last known calls from the seven people aboard an American schooner: The weather s turned nasty, how do we get away from it The phone calls and texts ended June 4. More than three weeks later, searchers said Thursday they have grave concerns for the crew on the classic 85-year-old wooden vessel that went missing while sailing from New Zealand to Australia. Attempts to contact the crew by radio and an aerial search this week have proved fruitless.Authorities say the skipper of the 70-foot vessel Nina is American David Dyche. They say there are two other American men and three American women aboard, aged between 17 and 73. Also aboard is a British man, aged 35.Messages posted online by friends indicate the boat originally left from Panama City, Florida. Meteorologist Bob McDavitt said he took a satellite phone call from the boat June 3. A woman named Evi asked how to get away from the weather. He said to call back in 30 minutes after he d studied a forecast. She did. She was quite controlled in her voice, it sounded like [url=https://www.nike-dunks.de]nike dunk high[/url] everything was under control, McDavitt said, adding that the call itself indicated [url=https://www.airforces.us]air force[/url] she was concerned about the conditions.McDavitt said he spoke only briefly to Evi, advising her to head south and to brace for a storm with strong winds and high seas. The next day he got a text, the last known communication from the boat: ANY UPDATE 4 NINA ... EVI McDavitt said he advised [url=https://www.adidas-yeezy.it]adidas yeezyslide[/url] the crew to stay p Lncr Venezuelan Congress accuses president of staging coup
Militants holding nine foreign hos [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley cup[/url] tages in southern Nigeria destroyed an oil pipeline Monday and blew up a boat in violence that has cut about 20 percent of crude production in Africa s oil giant.The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta said it attacked a Shell-operated oil-pipeline switching station known as a manifold and a military houseboat in the oil-rich southern region. Both were destroyed with explosives, the group said in an e-mail.Shell Spokeswoman Lisa Givert confirmed the oil-pipeline attack and said the houseboat was abandoned when the attackers blew it up. It was unclear who owned the boat.The militants announced no casualties, and said the Nigerian sailors fled when the assailants attacked the boat aboard which sailors based in the regio [url=https://www.stanleycups.ro]stanley cupe[/url] n live. Military officials in the region could not be reached for comment.The West African nation is reeling from weekend attacks in which militants blasted oil and gas pipelines and sabotaged a key oil loading terminal belonging to Royal Dutch Shell. That and an earlier attack has forced the company to halt the flow of about 455,000 barrels a day about one-fifth of daily output in Africa s top crude producer. The weekend violence sent crude prices higher in international markets.April Brent crude futures rose more than $1 per barrel on London s ICE Futures exchange. Trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange was closed for the Presidents Day holiday. Oil prices had jumped more than $1 and [url=https://www.stanley-cups.uk]stanley cup[/url] settled near $6