Six missing as vessel sinks off Sweden

STOCKHOLM – A Norwegian cargo vessel sank in a heavy storm in the North Sea off Sweden and its crew of six is missing, rescue…

STOCKHOLM – A Norwegian cargo vessel sank in a heavy storm in the North Sea off Sweden and its crew of six is missing, rescue workers said yesterday.

The Norwegian Meteorological Institute said force nine “strong gale” winds of 75-88km/h (47-54 miles/h) were registered in the northwestern part of the North Sea overnight, where the accident took place near the Norway-Sweden border.

Swedish maritime rescue authorities said that after receiving an emergency signal via satellite, a rescue team found life vests, rafts and debris from the ship but not the six crew members of Norwegian cargo vessel Langeland.

“We have received a message that only wreckage and life rafts were seen in the area and that the weather has been very poor,” Tore Myklebusthaug, managing director of shipowner Myklebusthaug Management, told the NTB news agency.

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He said the ship’s crew was Russian and Ukrainian. The 70m (230ft) vessel, which went missing close to the Koster Islands, was carrying stone to Norway.

In a separate incident, about 50km west of the Koster Islands on the Norwegian coast, a Chinese-owned dry-bulk vessel was leaking fuel after running aground near Langesund.

Norway’s joint rescue co-ordination centre said 16 sailors had been evacuated from the vessel and seven remained on the ship. The entire crew are Chinese nationals.

“We have put a request to the company to put pressure on the captain because Norwegian coast guard reports indicate the ship may not survive,” said rescue mission spokesman Stein Solberg.

He said a helicopter was standing by to evacuate the rest of the crew from the Panama-registered Full City vessel, which ran aground without cargo but with up to 1,120 tonnes of fuel on board.

Television channel TV2 showed pictures of oil coming ashore along the North Sea coastline in southern Norway – a popular summer holiday area west of the Oslo fjord.

A Norwegian representative of the World Wildlife Fund said the spill could affect a large number of birds from a nearby sanctuary and called on volunteers to help with the clean-up.