Protection of Military Remains Act 1986
The wreckage of all military aircraft (UK or other nations) that crashed in the United Kingdom, in United Kingdom territorial waters or in United Kingdom controlled waters are automatically protected irrespective of whether there was loss of life or whether the wrecking occurred during peacetime or in a combat. The wreckage of United Kingdom military aircraft are also protected under the act elsewhere in the world.
The law concerning protected places applies anywhere in the world, but in practice, outside the UK, the sanctions can only be enforced against UK citizens, UK flagged ships, or vessels landing in the UK, unless backed by local legislation.In practice if the wreckage is in Malaysian waters even the protectors have no legal authority over the scavengers if Malaysia has not ratified the law. If Malaysia has ratified the law it is up to their authorities as well to enforce it as well.
The original article also talks about exposing of crew remains which I find highly unlikely. I'd say there is nothing left of the crew after all the years in warm waters, only pieces of their belongings, and the memory, which still makes it a "grave".
The value of these ships as scrap metal is huge in those parts of the world and I'm sure the "entrepreneurs" have no problem picking up a crew for such quests, plus the black market value for any of the personal or military items obtained from the wreck adds value, even significantly in some cases.
"They eat bronze propellers?"
Made of phosphor bronze, the massive propellors would have earned a bumper payday for the scrap metal merchants. The scrap price for phosphor bronze is around £3,800 per ton, with each of the eight propellors weighing an estimated 15 tonnes.So one propeller is worth 57k £. I'd say a family would eat that propeller for a long time indeed in Malaysia.
But it is still sad, yes.
-C+