Vietnamese fisherman saved lives as boat sank off Big Island

Teweti Aukitino, 25, left, and Boata Temataake, 31, both of Kiribati, stand aboard the commercial fishing vessel Commander on Thursday, March 29, 2018 in Honolulu. The men were part of the crew of the Princess Hawaii, which sank off Hawaii's Big Island on March 25, 2018. All eight people aboard the vessel, including a federal fisheries observer, were rescued by the Commander about 12 hours after the sinking. (AP Photo/Sophia Yan)
The commercial fishing vessel Commander motors into Honolulu Harbor on Thursday, March 29, 2018 after rescuing the crew of its sister ship, the Princess Hawaii, four days earlier. The Princess Hawaii was fishing off the Big Island when the vessel capsized and sank with eight people aboard on March 25, 2018. Everyone escaped and was rescued by the Commander about 12 hours later. (AP Photo/Caleb Jones)
Federal fisheries observer Steve Dysart talks to The Associated Press on Friday, March 30, 2018 in Honolulu. Dysart, who works for a company that contracts with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, was aboard the commercial fishing vessel Princess Hawaii when it sank off Hawaii's Big Island on March 25, 2018. The observer and seven others, an American captain and six foreign fishermen, were rescued from their life raft about 12 hours after the boat sank. (AP Photo/Sophia Yan)
Khanh Huynh, 28, of Long Khanh district, Dong Nai province, Vietnam, stands aboard the commercial fishing vessel Commander on Thursday, March 29, 2018 in Honolulu. Huynh was about the Commander's sister ship, the Princess Hawaii, when it sank off Hawaii's Big Island on March 25, 2018. The Vietnamese fisherman helped save the lives of two Americans aboard the vessel as well as six other foreign workers from Vietnam and Kiribati. (AP Photo/Sophia Yan)

HONOLULU — Khanh Huynh has been a commercial fisherman since he was 12 years old. For the past six years, he’s been living on a fishing boat in Hawaii, catching premium ahi tuna for some of the world’s most discerning consumers.