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Teenage girls drown in river despite heroic rescue attempts

Rescue crews involved in the search on Tuesday.
Rescue crews involved in the search on Tuesday.

Dive teams have recovered the bodies of two teenage girls who went missing as they played in a fast-flowing river, Northumbria Police have said.

The pair were spotted getting into trouble as they played in the River Wear at Fatfield, Washington, Tyne and Wear, at around 3pm on Tuesday.

An off-duty policeman and a member of the public tried to save the girls before around 100 emergency service personnel joined the search and rescue effort.

A boy who also attempted to rescue the girls was pulled to safety by the police officer.

Emergency services workers found the bodies last night during searches of the same stretch of river.

Superintendent Alan Veitch said the rescuers were alerted after the pair were spotted “in difficulty”.

He said: “One was an off-duty police officer going for a run who dived in and saved a boy who was trying to save one of the missing girls.

“Another gentleman dived in and swam the width of the river to get to one of the girls but he came up empty-handed. He was distraught, as you can imagine.”

The river was tidal up to a point upstream from where the children went missing, which caused a lot of debris and foliage in the river, the officer said.

They went under around 100 yards downstream, at a bend in the river.

He believed the tide might have turned at around the time they got into difficulty.

He added: “Today (Tuesday) was one of the hottest days of the year, it’s the school holidays and it’s tempting to go in the water.

“There are big, strong, powerful river currents and this is not the place to lark about in the water.”

The force said the families of both girls, who have not yet been publicly identified, have been informed.

A Northumbria Police spokesman said: “Both bodies have been taken to Sunderland Royal Hospital. Activities at the river will now be scaled down and inquiries will be carried out into the circumstances of the incident.”

Paul Cronin, 63, who lives nearby, saw one of the men who had attempted a rescue.

He said: “This gentleman came running up towards the park and I thought it was strange because he was dressed in his boxer shorts, even though it’s warm.

“He had just crawled out of the river and had nearly drowned himself. He was screaming at me, ‘Can you swim?’.”

They went back to the river but the first rescuer was too exhausted to go back in and Mr Cronin said when he got there, he saw no sign of the girls.

There was a group of three teenage boys who had been playing with the girls.

“By the time I got there it was too late,” he said. “She had gone under the water. If she had been on the surface I would have gone in.”

Mr Cronin said a sister of one of the missing girls was soon at the scene.

“She was in a right state, trying to get in touch with her mother but her phone was dead,” he said.

Scores of people gathered in small groups close to the scene of the major search, by the Biddick Inn pub.

Fire crews, one in a dinghy searching the river, joined police specialists and a coastguard team.