The wreck of the Royal Navy's heavy cruiser HMS
Exeter was rediscovered by leisure divers in 2002. The
ship had been a casualty of Japanese action during the
bitter battle of the Java Sea in 1942. It lay at 195 feet
deep (60m) south of Borneo, in Indonesian waters.
However, a survey carried out ahead of the 75th
anniversary of the sinking has revealed nothing but
indentations in the seabed where the wreck formerly
lay. Three other ships have similarly disappeared; the
Dutch vessels HNLMS De Ruyter and the Java and the
USS Perch. A third Dutch vessel, the HNLMS Kortenaer, is
reported with a large section now missing.
The inevitable conclusion is that these wrecks have been salvaged illegally. Salvage ships often pose as
fishing boats to disguise their activities, but it is remarkable
that such large vessels have been removed without
drawing the attention of the authorities.
The Dutch government has launched an investigation
into the fate of the wrecks, which were classified as
war graves and protected under UNESCO's Convention
on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage
2001. The Indonesian government refuses to take
any responsibility and is less than contrite, with an
Indonesian Navy spokesman saying, "If they ask why
the ships are missing, why didn't they guard the ships?"