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Old Dec 5, 08, 3:16 pm   #1
 
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Passengers evacuated from cruise liner aground in Antarctica

Just heard about this on the news returning from work today. At least it seems the ship did not go down. Anyone have any more details?

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp...vl8aEy_OdZY3ew

SANTIAGO (AFP) — A Chilean navy vessel has evacuated all 89 passengers of various nationalities from an Argentine cruise ship which had run aground in Antarctica, an official in charge of the rescue operation said on Friday.

They were taken off the cruise liner Ciudad de Ushuaia, which became stuck Thursday in Wilhelmina Bay, part of the Antarctic peninsula that reaches towards the southern tip of South America, Commander Alan Nettle said.

Argentine authorities on Thursday said the passengers and 33 crew members were all unhurt and the vessel was in no danger of sinking.

Citizens from Australia, Belgium, Britain, China, Germany, France, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Spain, Switzerland and the United States were among the passengers on the ship.

Nettle, speaking to the Cooperative radio station in Chile's capital Santiago, said a Chilean navy transport, Aquiles, "has embarked all of the passengers from the ship Ushuaia."

They were being taken to Chile's Eduardo Frei base in Antarctica's Fildes Peninsula to the north, from where they would be transported to a South American destination yet to be decided.

Nettle said the cruise ship's crew remained on board their vessel "to carry out salvage actions the owner will have to follow."

A Chilean helicopter was also dispatched to fly over the area of the accident to survey a fuel slick left by Cuidad de Ushuaia, which had punctured a tank in the accident, the navy said in a statement.

Another Chilean ship, a tug boat, was also being sent to help contain the pollution.

A spokeswoman for the Chilean navy told AFP the evacuation was carried out between 0630 and 1000 GMT on Friday.

The grounded cruise ship was used for tourist trips around Antarctica -- an increasingly popular activity in the southern hemisphere's warmer months for wealthy tourists from around the world.

The Panamanian-flagged ship regularly left from Ushuaia, the southernmost Argentine city.

According to the Argentine and Chilean media, Ciudad de Ushuaia hit a rock on Thursday, putting a hole in a fuel tank. The slick was being contained by a series of floating barriers.

The liner reportedly left on its 11-day cruise on November 28.

Passengers typically pay thousands of dollars for the experience of visiting the world's only uninhabited continent.

Other accidents have happened in the past to cruises in the region.

In December 2007, a Norwegian cruise liner, Fram, floated adrift for two hours before rescue in the same region with 256 passengers and 70 crew on board after its engines failed.

In November 2007, a Canadian-owned ship, Explorer, sank after hitting an iceberg. Its 154 occupants abandoned ship in lifeboats and were rescued without injury, though a massive fuel slick sullied the pristine protected nature zone.
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Old Aug 6, 09, 11:44 am   #2
 
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Interesting topic, sorry I only see it now.

Here's a trip report somebody on that ship did. It's German but has lots of pics, including of the evacuation via Chilean Navy and Argentine Air Force

http://forum.airliners.de/index.php?showtopic=43623

Similarities between usernames are entirely not coincidental :-P
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Old Aug 27, 09, 6:01 pm   #3
 
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The Antarctic cruise market is an ocean tragedy waiting to happen. They are cruising those waters with ships that hold over 3000 passengers and crew and would probably overwhelm the Argentine or Chilean Navies if an accident occurred. I wonder if those ships even carry any special safety gear when cruising in those waters
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