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Gulf of Mexico oil rig accident kills 18 workers

At least 18 oil workers were killed when a drilling rig hit an oil platform in stormy weather, spilling gas and oil into the Gulf of Mexico, the state-owned oil company said Wednesday. Seven workers were still missing.
Image: Oil platform in the gulf of Mexico
This file photo provided by Mexico's national oil company Pemex shows an offshore oil installation in the Gulf of Mexico, near the coast of Campeche, on March 2.Alfredo Guerrero Ho / EPA file
/ Source: The Associated Press

At least 18 oil workers were killed when a drilling rig hit an oil platform in stormy weather, spilling gas and oil into the Gulf of Mexico, the state-owned oil company said Wednesday. Seven workers were still missing.

Rescuers have pulled 61 oil workers to safety from storm-tossed waters but have yet to control the oil leak, Mexico's oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, said in a news release.

One survivor, Eder Ortega Flores, 25, told the Televisa television network that workers abandoned the rig amid 25-foot waves only after leaking gas rose to unbearable levels and the supply of air from emergency breathing devices ran out. Once in the water, the waves battered the workers' orange-colored, covered life rafts.

"The life rafts didn't hold up under the force of the waves," he said. "They broke up, at least the one I was on, little by little, until the raft sank, and all my co-workers went into the sea."

Ortega Flores lost sight of them, and tread water through the night, until he saw the shoreline early Wednesday and swam to it.

The workers who died included four Pemex employees, seven employees of the subcontractor company that operated the rig, at least one rescue boat crew member, and six others who worked for other companies, Pemex said. One woman was among the dead.

The search continued for the seven missing workers. All those rescued were "out of danger," according to Pemex.

President Felipe Calderon issued a statement expressing his "most sincere condolences and solidarity in this moment of pain" to the victims' families and offering them any help the government could provide.

Pemex said it would take three to five days to control the leak caused by Tuesday's accident, but noted that it mainly involved gas.

"The spill of crude oil into the sea has been less than originally thought," the company said.

It was unclear whether the missing workers were floating at sea or in life rafts. The Mexican navy sent eight helicopters and four boats to help in the rescue effort.

The company said 81 workers and five rescue personnel abandoned a subcontractor's drilling rig known as the Usumacinta after it hit the Kab 101 light-production platform amid 25-foot waves and winds gusting to 80 mph.

The Usumacinta, a mobile, self-raising drilling rig, was set up next to Kab 101, preparing to drill a well close to the platform. The force of the waves caused of the rig's "legs" to hit the valve assembly of the platform, causing it to leak oil and gas.

The mishap occurred about 20 miles offshore from the port of Dos Bocas in Tabasco state.

Mexico's main oil ports remained closed Wednesday because of the storm, Pemex said.

The Usumacinta drilling rig is owned by the Compania Perforadora Central SA de CV and operates under contract to Pemex.