Ice-bound ferry safe back in Stockholm
A PASSENGER ferry with nearly 1,000 people on board returned safely to Stockholm harbor early yesterday after breaking free from heavy pack ice that had trapped it for hours in the Baltic Sea, officials said.
Dozens of other ships and boats had also been stuck as gale-force winds built up large ice masses along the Swedish coastline.
Ice breakers helped release the ferry Amorella at the edge of an archipelago north of Stockholm. Rescue helicopters and military hovercraft had been placed on standby to evacuate passengers if needed. No one was injured.
"It arrived in the port during the morning," Sea rescue spokeswoman Christel Englund said.
The Swedish Maritime Administration said the Amorella had 753 passengers and 190 crew on board. The 10-deck ship belongs to Viking Line, which operates Baltic Sea cruises between Sweden and Finland.
The Regal Star, a cargo ship with 56 people on board, was set free early yesterday. Three other ferries that got stuck in the ice in the archipelago were able to break free the day before.
One of those ships, the Finnfellow, collided lightly with the Amorella when the ice pressed the two ships together, but there was no major damage to either ship, officials said.
About 26 ships were awaiting help from ice breakers in the northern parts of the Baltic Sea, but the situation was under control, said Ann Ericsson, a spokeswoman for the maritime administration's ice breaker service.
Heavy ice cover is not uncommon further north, but the ice rarely gets thick enough in the Stockholm archipelago to trap powerful passenger ferries like the Amorella.
Mats Nystrom, a passenger on the Amorella, told Swedish broadcaster SVT that there was no panic on the ship.
"The atmosphere is calm so there is no danger in that sense," said Nystrom, who is a sports presenter for the network. He said the most dramatic event had been when the two ships touched.
"Suddenly in the loudspeakers there's a voice saying that all passengers must immediately move to the front. Of course at that moment the passengers got worried and wondered what was happening," Nystrom said.
The maritime administration said the ships had ignored warnings about the icy conditions.
"Normally we can handle this type of obstacle," Viking Line CEO Jan Karstrom told SVT. "But in this case the wind is unfortunate. It's blowing toward land and it means that (the ice) is packed more and more against land."
Three Swedish icebreakers helped free the ship. Finland also dispatched an ice breaker to help out.
Dozens of other ships and boats had also been stuck as gale-force winds built up large ice masses along the Swedish coastline.
Ice breakers helped release the ferry Amorella at the edge of an archipelago north of Stockholm. Rescue helicopters and military hovercraft had been placed on standby to evacuate passengers if needed. No one was injured.
"It arrived in the port during the morning," Sea rescue spokeswoman Christel Englund said.
The Swedish Maritime Administration said the Amorella had 753 passengers and 190 crew on board. The 10-deck ship belongs to Viking Line, which operates Baltic Sea cruises between Sweden and Finland.
The Regal Star, a cargo ship with 56 people on board, was set free early yesterday. Three other ferries that got stuck in the ice in the archipelago were able to break free the day before.
One of those ships, the Finnfellow, collided lightly with the Amorella when the ice pressed the two ships together, but there was no major damage to either ship, officials said.
About 26 ships were awaiting help from ice breakers in the northern parts of the Baltic Sea, but the situation was under control, said Ann Ericsson, a spokeswoman for the maritime administration's ice breaker service.
Heavy ice cover is not uncommon further north, but the ice rarely gets thick enough in the Stockholm archipelago to trap powerful passenger ferries like the Amorella.
Mats Nystrom, a passenger on the Amorella, told Swedish broadcaster SVT that there was no panic on the ship.
"The atmosphere is calm so there is no danger in that sense," said Nystrom, who is a sports presenter for the network. He said the most dramatic event had been when the two ships touched.
"Suddenly in the loudspeakers there's a voice saying that all passengers must immediately move to the front. Of course at that moment the passengers got worried and wondered what was happening," Nystrom said.
The maritime administration said the ships had ignored warnings about the icy conditions.
"Normally we can handle this type of obstacle," Viking Line CEO Jan Karstrom told SVT. "But in this case the wind is unfortunate. It's blowing toward land and it means that (the ice) is packed more and more against land."
Three Swedish icebreakers helped free the ship. Finland also dispatched an ice breaker to help out.
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