Rescue operation in Caribbean waters
The setting is the vast and sometimes treacherous Mexican Caribbean. The Secretary of the Navy (Semar) urgently activated the Marine Plan. The reason: to locate two sailboat-type vessels that disappeared with nine crew members of different nationalities. Their destination was Havana, Cuba.
The boats set sail on March 20 from Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo, and were due to arrive between March 24 and 25; However, so far there has been no communication or confirmation of his arrival.
That silence was the alarm. They stopped being late travelers and became missing at sea. Search and rescue protocols were put into place immediately.
A deployment without borders
The search knows no limits. Semar alerted all its naval commands in the region, from the Fifth Naval Region to the Naval Search and Rescue Stations. But this goes beyond our waters.
International coordination was activated with rescue centers and authorities from Poland, France, Cuba and the United States. It is a network stretched over the ocean, sharing information minute by minute to find a point on an overly large map.
Surface units and aircraft are already patrolling the estimated route between Isla Mujeres and Havana. They calculate currents, analyze winds, sweep the blue in the hope of a sparkle. Every hour counts.
The Navy makes a final call: anyone at sea who sees something should report it. Behind the technical terms—’protocols’, ‘coordination’—there are nine lives pending a logistical miracle on the waves.




