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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mexican fisherman tell their story of survival


From left, Mexican fishermen Jesus Vidana, Lucio Rendon and Salvador Ordonez arrive in the Marshall Islands on Monday after being rescued by an Asian fishing ship. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Lisa J. Adams Associated Press

MEXICO CITY – Three Mexican fishermen said they sang ballads, danced and played air guitar as they drifted for months in an open boat across the wide Pacific, surviving on raw fish caught with jury-rigged engine cables and drinking rainwater.

They read the Bible aloud, prayed – and tossed overboard the bodies of two dead companions they said starved to death. The government said Tuesday it would investigate the deaths and other aspects of the survivors’ account.

Several days after being rescued by an Asian fishing boat, the men seemed to be in remarkably good health Tuesday as they appeared before Mexican television cameras in the Marshall Islands, 5,500 miles from their home on Mexico’s Pacific coast.

Mexican news media have cast doubt on the men’s account of their nine-month odyssey, suggesting they might be drug smugglers who made up the story to avoid prosecution. There are no records of their departure, and some relatives initially said they had been gone for only three months.

“There are stories going around that you were shipping cocaine,” Televisa anchor Carlos Loret de Mola told the men via satellite.

“Well, no, that isn’t true,” survivor Lucio Rendon said in an interview Tuesday with Televisa.

The fishermen said they know their tale is far-fetched – but insisted it’s true. They also said they never doubted they would live to tell it.

Their ordeal began, they said, on Oct. 28 in their hometown of San Blas, when they set out with the boat’s owner and another man on a shark-fishing expedition they expected to last a few days. Mother Nature had other plans.

A cold front swept in and a strong wind dragged the boat out to sea, they said. As the men struggled to turn toward islands they could see in the distance, they ran out of gas. They prayed to drift back to Mexico before their food and water ran out.

Instead, the prevailing currents apparently pushed their 27-foot boat all the way across the Pacific. With no shelter onboard, the men protected themselves from the sun with blankets and set about doing what they knew best: fishing. They crafted lines from cables and hooks from springs in the boat’s motor.

“We straightened them and made hooks,” Rendon told Televisa. “There were times when we caught four, five fish, and at times nothing.”

Rendon, Jesus Vidana, and Salvador Ordonez said they ate the fish raw – as they did the seabirds that occasionally flew by. But the boat’s owner, whom the survivors knew only as Juan from Mazatlan, and a fourth employee refused to eat the catch, they said.

One died in January and the other in February, the survivors said.

The fishermen said they were saddened when their companions died and waited three days before throwing Juan overboard.

“For Señor Juan,we said seven Our Fathers and seven Hail Marys, then threw him into the ocean,” Vidana told Televisa. “The same with the other one. We prayed and tossed him overboard.”

President Vicente Fox’s spokesman, Ruben Aguilar, told reporters Tuesday that “without a doubt there has to be an investigation.”

“The presidency accepts as fact that they had this experience of practically nine months adrift, but a series of circumstances have to be explained, such as how the two other fishermen aboard the boat disappeared.”

A woman who answered the telephone at the Marshall Islands’ Embassy in Washington said the government had not commented on the case.