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Sure thing. It appears the Captain chose to press on to destination
vs. come about in the sea condition that prevailed, despite fire on board. Overall vessel condition was apparently poor on this ro/ro ferry, and design not seaworthy for the seas she normally traversed in this Red Sea routing if weather turned poor. Two additional decks added after original build caused inherent loss of stability. Overloaded with passengers (common with many ferries throughout the world in daily operations) who fled the fire may have been enough additonal instability to lead to the chain of events, rapidly bringing her down. No confirmation yet of when Captain left the ship. Prior service in Med was cut short after the Estonia incident gave Euros reason to change design safety standards. I suppose some would point finger at Western Europe for not scrapping this vessel, but that's the way of the world it seems. There is alway a market as long as she floats and mechanicals will allow her to make decent way. Pascal wrote: Thank You for the information; I found it vvery helpfull. Regrads Pascal |
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