Rescue teams evacuated more than 400 people from a car ferry that caught fire off Greece's Adriatic coast in a 36-hour operation on roiling seas, but 10 people were killed in the disaster. Italian and Greek authorities continued an air search of the
Eight merchant ships were next to the Norman Atlantic as part of the rescue effort, and being used to form a barrier against the high winds of up to 88 kilometres per hour.
Italian Coast Guard spokesman Marco Di Milla said the rescue operations would likely last for hours. An Italian Coast Guard boat was at the scene, as well one helicopter each from the Italian Navy and Air Force.
Greek authorities said they had sent five helicopters and a military transport plane to the area to assist in the operation, with the ship reported to be 42 nautical miles (48 miles, 78 kilometers) northwest of Corfu.
Merchant Marine Minister Miltiadis Varvitsiotis said the coastguard was in constant contact with Italian authorities and the Greek armed forces. “We are committed to rescuing everyone on the ship, and are trying to ensure that nobody will be left
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras was in contact with his Italian counterpart, Matteo Renzi, to coordinate the operation “at the highest level,” Greek government officials said adding that the operation was now under Italian control.
He said 234 passengers and 34 crew members are Greek and the rest are of various unspecified nationalities.
Merchant Marine spokesman Nikos Lagadianos said a lifeboat carrying 150 passengers had been lowered into the water, but that only 42 had been moved to a nearby cargo ship so far.
“The fire is still burning,” Greek passenger Sofoklis Styliaras told private Mega television. “On the lower deck, where the lifeboats are, our shoes were starting to melt from the heat ... There’s nowhere else for us to go. It’s impossible to walk
Passengers, stranded on a high deck for more than six hours, told Greek media that lifeboats from nearby vessels had been unable to take them off.
The fire broke out on the car deck of the Italian-flagged Norman Atlantic, travelling from the Greek port of Patras to Ancona, Italy, with 423 passengers and 55 crew members. No one has been reported injured, and the ship is not in immediate danger
Greek and Italian rescue helicopters and vessels struggled to reach the ferry, with merchant ships lining up to form a wall against the gusts.
A ferry carrying nearly 500 people caught fire off the Greek island of Corfu early on Sunday, trapping passengers on the top decks as gale-force winds and choppy seas hampered the evacuation. Photo: AP
Bad weather hampered efforts overnight to attach cables to the ferry for towing. Pictures from Monday afternoon showed the ship still smouldering, and Lupi said tow cables attached overnight broke. Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, speaking at a
Some of those rescued were not on the original ship's manifest, and Italian authorities are looking for a definitive list of passengers to cross-check it with the names of the survivors, he said, adding that it was possible that there were illegal
The fire broke out on Sunday on a vehicle deck of the Norman Atlantic ferry, whose manifest said should be carrying 478 passengers and crew and more than 200 vehicles. Rescue efforts were complicated by bad weather. Italian and Greek helicopters
Rescue teams evacuated more than 400 people from a car ferry that caught fire off Greece's Adriatic coast in a 36-hour operation on roiling seas, but 10 people were killed in the disaster. Italian and Greek authorities continued an air search of the