(CNN) -- Two sailors from a ship that capsized in the Irish
Sea in gale-forced winds were rescued "in reasonable condition" Sunday
while five remained missing, the British coast guard said.
The body of an eighth sailor was recovered, the coast guard said.
After a daylong search in
rough seas, the British coast guard ended the effort to find the five
missing men as darkness fell, according to a coast guard press officer.
"Today at roughly 16:45
GMT (11:45 a.m. ET), a decision was made by the coast guard to call off
the search and rescue mission for the five remaining missing sailors in
the Irish Sea," press officer Jo Groenenberg told CNN.
A Ministry of Defence
spokesman earlier confirmed to CNN that Prince William was the co-pilot
of the helicopter that plucked the two rescued sailors from a life raft.
The crew of the Swanland sent out a
mayday call about 2 a.m. local time, saying the ship was caught in
strong winds and had a cracked hull, the coast guard's press office
said.
A few ships responded, but the Swanland had capsized by the time they got there, the office said.
The coast guard dispatched two
helicopters, including one from RAF Valley base, where Prince William is
a search-and-rescue pilot. The helicopter pulled two men from the
water.
A coast guard spokesman later said
the two -- who included the ship's second officer -- were in "reasonable
condition" after the helicopter had carried them to the military base.