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Mystery remains over cargo vessel

Mystery still surrounds a missing Russian-manned cargo ship, with a sighting off Africa’s Cape Verde islands still to be confirmed.

The Arctic Sea, with 15 Russian crew members on board, was last sighted in the Bay of Biscay on 30 July.

Cape Verde officials say they think the ship is 400 nautical miles (740km) off one of the islands.

But Moscow’s envoy to Cape Verde said he had not been informed of any confirmed sighting.

The 4,000-tonne Maltese-flagged vessel, which had been carrying timber, went off radar after passing through the English Channel.

Click here for a map charting sightings of the Arctic Sea

There has been huge speculation over the reason for its disappearance, ranging from pirates to a mafia dispute to a commercial quarrel.

A source linked to the Cape Verde coastguard told AFP news agency the Arctic Sea was outside its territorial waters.

The coastguard was informing maritime officials about the ship’s movements, the source said, adding: "When the ship enters our jurisdiction, we will decide in consultation with our partners what actions to take."

Some reports have put the ship 400 nautical miles north of Sao Vicente.

French intelligence said it had found a ship matching the Arctic Sea’s description in the area.

The Portuguese military would not confirm one of its planes had flown over the vessel.

The Arctic Sea (file image)

However, the Russian ambassador to Cape Verde, Alexander Karpushin, said he had not been officially informed of the sighting and told Russia’s RAI agency the sighting was "not true".

Tom Wilkerson, chief executive officer of the US Naval Institute, told the BBC the disappearance raised a number of concerns.

"What we’re looking at is a ship that’s over 4,000 tonnes, with no transponder working, that now all of the world’s searching capability has not been able to find.

"Just because the ship doesn’t appear to have anything on it of value doesn’t mean that someone can’t place something there that could be very valuable, and also very dangerous."

Last known contact

Carrying timber reportedly worth $1.8m (£1.1m), the Arctic Sea sailed from Finland and had been scheduled to dock in the Algerian port of Bejaia on 4 August.

"It would seem that these acts, such as they have been reported, have nothing in common with ‘traditional’ acts of piracy or armed robbery at sea."

Martin Selmayr
EU Commission

Speculation rife over missing ship

The crew reported being boarded by up to 10 armed men as the ship sailed through the Baltic Sea on 24 July, but the intruders were reported to have left the vessel on an inflatable boat after 12 hours.

There are also reports of the ship being attacked a second time off the Portuguese coast. However the ship’s operators said they had no knowledge of the incident and Portugal said the ship was never in its territorial waters.

The last known contact with the crew was when the Arctic Sea reported to British maritime authorities as it passed through the Dover Strait.

On Friday, the European Union Commission spokesman Martin Selmayr said: "From information currently available it would seem that these acts, such as they have been reported, have nothing in common with ‘traditional’ acts of piracy or armed robbery at sea."

Journey of the Arctic Sea

Click here to return


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Microsoft Will Ship Same Version of Windows 7 to Europe

Microsoft now plans to issue the same version of Windows 7 in Europe as in the rest of the world, only with a ballot screen that allows users to choose a specific Web browser. European antitrust regulators have threatened to cause trouble for Microsoft if it includes Internet Explorer 8 in the release of its new operating system, prompting Microsoft to develop Windows 7 E, an edition without Internet Explorer.
– After months of wrestling with European antitrust regulators, Microsoft
has decided to issue the same version of Windows 7 in the European Union as in
the rest of the world.
Previously, Microsoft had intended to ship Windows 7 E, a separate EU
version of its upcoming operating system that would…



Indian coast guard reportedly detains suspicious North Korean ship after six hour chase

A newspaper has reported that Indian coast guards have detained a North Korean ship carrying a cargo of sugar off the countryÕs southeastern coast after a six-hour chase. The Times of India reported on Saturday that the ship, MV Musen, was chased by coast guards who fired in the air

Cosco Singapore posts $37m in 2Q09 net profit, down 71.2% y-o-y

Mainboard-listed Cosco Corporation (Singapore), one of the leading ship repair & marine engineering and shipping groups, today announced another set of profitable results for the second quarter ended 30 June 2009.

Group turnover declined 31% to $718.5 million in Q2 2009 from $1.0 billion in Q2 2008 amidst poor operating landscape. Ship repair, ship building and marine engineering revenue fell 30.4% to $681.3 million in Q2 2009 on lower revenue from ship repair and conversion projects due to the global economic downturn.

Confusion over cruise flu claims

Voyager of the Seas at Villefranche-sur-Mer (31 July 2009)

A cruise ship carrying dozens of victims of swine flu among its 5,000 passengers and crew has docked in the south of France, officials have said.

Sixty crew members have so far been diagnosed with the H1N1 virus, while 70 of their colleagues were also showing signs of being infected, they added.

They will be treated on board the ship while it docks at Villefranche-sur-Mer.

On Thursday, officials said a 14-year-old girl infected with H1N1 had become France’s first fatality from the virus.

However, they cautioned that it did not appear that her death, at a hospital in the north-western city of Brest, had been directly linked to the virus.

"This young girl suffered from a serious illness, complicated by a severe pulmonary infection," the Institute for Public Health Surveillance (InVS) said.

Neighbouring Belgium also reported its first swine flu death on Thursday when a 34-year-old woman passed away after developing "a double viral pneumonia".

Deaths have now been recorded in five European nations – Belgium, France, Hungary, Spain and the UK, where 31 people have died.

The cruise ship docked at Villefranche-sur-Mer – the Voyager of the Seas, operated by Royal Caribbean Cruises – had travelled from the Italian city of Naples as part of a Mediterranean tour.

The ship’s 3,600 passengers have been allowed off to visit the town before the boat leaves on Friday night for Marseille, officials say.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

India still negotiating price on aircraft carrier Admiral Gorkshov: Antony

Defence Minister A.K. Antony on Wednesday informed Parliament that India and Russia are yet to conclude negotiations on the price that Moscow has demanded for the aircraft carrier Admiral Gorshkov, and the criticism expressed over the ship’’s viability will be kept in mind before signing the final contract.
Replying to a question in the Rajya Sabha, [...]

India still negotiating price on aircraft carrier Admiral Gorkshov: Antony

Defence Minister A.K. Antony on Wednesday informed Parliament that India and Russia are yet to conclude negotiations on the price that Moscow has demanded for the aircraft carrier Admiral Gorshkov, and the criticism expressed over the ship’’s viability will be kept in mind before signing the final contract.
Replying to a question in the Rajya Sabha, [...]

Whale wedged on cruise ship bow

A rare whale was discovered wedged on to the bow of a cruise ship when it docked in a Canadian port.

The 70ft fin whale, a threatened species in Canada, was found when the Sapphire Princess docked at the Port of Vancouver, the cruise company said.

It said it had "strict whale avoidance" measures and it was unclear where, when or how the whale became stuck.

Tourists looked on as the dead whale was examined by fisheries department staff.

The cruise ship had arrived from Alaska about 0630 local time on Saturday.

"We are not aware that any whales were sighted as the ship sailed through the Inside Passage to Vancouver," Princess Cruises said.

The whale was on top of the bulbous bow, the part of the bow that goes through the water, Princess Cruises said.

Captain unaware

Its whale avoidance measures include altering course and reducing speed if whales are spotted nearby.

The captain was unaware of the whale’s presence until the ship docked, said a spokeswoman from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans quoted by the Vancouver Star.

Map

The whale could have been struck north of Vancouver Island since fin whales are not normally found in the Johnstone or Georgia straits, Lisa Spaven added.

She also said "vessel strikes are a very real threat to fin whales," but were hard to quantify as incidents often went unreported.

The fisheries department will need to conduct a post-mortem examination to find out if the whale was dead or alive before the collision.

According to the Vancouver Star, two tugboats were hired by the fisheries department to nudge the whale from the bow.

It was then moved to a barge.

Ten years ago another cruise ship arrived at the same port with a whale on the bow, the newspaper said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Nigeria militants release crew

File photo from September 2008 showing four members of the Mend militant group, in camouflage and carrying machine guns

Militants in Nigeria have released six crew members they seized from an oil tanker, the Sichem Peace, nearly three weeks ago.

The ship’s managers, EMS, said the six, including the Russian captain, were on their way to Lagos for medical checks.

The militant group, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend), said the release was part of a 60-day ceasefire announced last week.

The ship had already resumed commercial operations with a supplemented crew.

Armed men boarded the ship on 4 July. They took hostage six crew members – three Russians, two Filipinos and an Indian.

The rest of the crew were released and took the ship – which flies under the flag of Singapore – to a safe distance offshore.

Lost revenue

The Mend statement said that the releases were a "dividend of the current ceasefire" and added that it hoped the Nigerian government would reciprocate.

Map

The group wants the Nigerian military to withdraw from the Gbaramatu community in Delta State, and allow displaced people to return home.

The ceasefire was proposed by President Umara Yar’Adua in May. It was accepted by Mend after the government released its leader Henry Okah on 13 July, and dropped the treason charges against him.

The violence in the Niger Delta has sharply cut Nigeria’s oil production, costing it billions of dollars in lost revenue.

Mend says it is fighting for a fairer share of the wealth of the Niger Delta.

But many criminal gangs have taken advantage of the lawlessness in the area.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

German freighter freed for ransom

The UAE-operated dhow MV Nafeya (L) is approached by Somali pirates off the coast of Somalia, 9 July (Indian government handout)

Somali pirates have released a German-owned cargo ship held for nearly three months and its crew of 11 Romanians.

The pirates said a ransom of $1.8m (£1.1m) was paid. Reports say they fired in the air in jubilation when the money was delivered in a tugboat.

The ship – the MV Victoria – was captured in May in the Gulf of Aden, south of the Yemeni port of al-Mukalla.

Pirates attacked more than 130 merchant ships off the Somali coast last year, taking in millions in ransom payments.

Another German ship, the Hansa Stavanger, is still being held. It was seized in April with 24 crew members on board.

Dozens of international naval ships are patrolling the waters off the Somali coast in a bid to reduce pirate attacks in what is one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Robert McGill Arrested In Wife’s High-Seas Death

SAN DIEGO — A Los Angeles man was arrested Thursday for allegedly murdering his wife three days into a five-day cruise to Mexico, turning the luxury oceanliner into a crime scene as it sailed through the waters of the Pacific Ocean.

Rob…

Another Blagojevich Lawyer Jumps Ship

It was just last month that Chicago lawyer Giel Stein joined Rod Blagojevich’s defense team.

More on Rod Blagojevich

Innovation@Intel: Air Quality Measuring & Reporting

When sailors aboard the Hapag-Lloyd Bangkok Express container ship want to phone a friend, they use a satellite phone – which is standard, but the costs of $2.25 per-minute are hard to swallow. To ease the burden on their pocketbooks, the ship will soon have an Intel Atom Z5xx-based communications system makeover. Mounted on the outside of the ship, and designed to withstand extreme temperatures, the Atom system will connect with the best available and most cost-effective network – such as 3G, satellite or Wi-Fi – to enable the crew to more easily communicate with people on shore. This is one example of the 15 billion devices expected to be connected to the Internet by 2015. Learn more: Embedded Internet.