Helicopter crews work through night to rescue ferry passengers

Airlift efforts ongoing as hundreds trapped on burning vessel adrift off Greece

Paramedics assist a woman as passengers from the burning ferry between Italy and Albania are transported to the town of Otranto, near Lecce, in southern Italy. Italian and Greek crews battled gale-force winds and massive waves to get hundreds off the vessel. At least one person has died and two have been injured. Photograph: Ivan Tortorella/AP
Paramedics assist a woman as passengers from the burning ferry between Italy and Albania are transported to the town of Otranto, near Lecce, in southern Italy. Italian and Greek crews battled gale-force winds and massive waves to get hundreds off the vessel. At least one person has died and two have been injured. Photograph: Ivan Tortorella/AP

Italian and Greek helicopter crews prepared to work through the night to airlift passengers in pairs off a burning ferry adrift in the Adriatic Sea, battling darkness and bad weather that yesterday hampered rescue efforts by other ships

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Helicopters were plucking passengers off the Italian- flagged Norman Atlantic and transferring them to a nearby vessel, after a dramatic day that began when a fire broke out on its lower deck in the early hours.

A Greek government official said one man had died but there were no other confirmed reports of casualties among almost 500 passengers and crew and as night fell, Greek authorities said 156 people were clear of the danger zone.

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Irish connection

The

Norman Atlantic

had previously been in service on the first sea route connecting Ireland to France and Spain.

The vessel went into service on the Rosslare to Saint Nazaire and Gijón in northern Spain route in January of this year. The service was suspended in March for dry docking and resumed in June only to be permanently taken off at the end of August.

A Greek official said yesterday that 150 people had got off the ship aboard a rescue boat earlier in the day.

After the ferry drifted in fierce winds into Albanian waters, a tugboat aimed to tow the Norman Atlantic into Albania's main port, Durres, with another tug helping for part of the journey, an official from another Albanian port said.

“We are making superhuman efforts in this extremely difficult operation,” a Greek coastguard spokesman said. “Operations by air will continue throughout the night.”

A Greek defence ministry official said two Italian and two Greek Super Puma helicopters had been deployed, with each air transfer taking about 15 minutes as pairs of passengers were bundled into a rescue basket and winched from the vessel.

Earlier, the coastguard spokesman said the heavy rain hampering the rescue had helped contain the fire although the ship was still burning.

Terrified passengers said they had to move higher and higher in the ship to escape the flames. “We went to the deck where there were lifeboats, but at some point we felt the floor burning and we went higher up to the heliport,” Rania Fireou told Greek television by phone before the airlifts began.

“There are many children and elderly people aboard,” she said. “We have gathered all together and we are trying to warm ourselves.”

Greek shipping minister Miltiadis Varvitsiotis said the bad weather, with winds of nearly 90km/h earlier, made the operation extremely difficult.

“We are doing everything we can to save those on board and no one, no one will be left helpless in this tough situation,” he said. “It is one of the most complicated rescue operations that we have ever done.”

Coastguard officials said the Norman Atlantic, which was also carrying more than 200 vehicles, was 44 nautical miles (82km) northwest of the island of Corfu when it radioed for help. It had been travelling from Patras in western Greece to the Italian city of Ancona.

Command of the operation was transferred to Italy after winds took the helpless vessel out of Greek waters but officials were co-ordinating closely and an Albanian coastguard vessel was also taking part.

A coastguard official said nearby passenger and container ships had attempted to form a ring around the burning vessel to try to form a windbreak to allow small rescue boats to approach.

Officials said there were 478 passengers and crew on the Norman Atlantic, of whom 268 were Greek, while a foreign ministry official said there were also passengers from countries including Germany, Italy, Austria, Turkey, France and the Netherlands. Many appeared to be truck drivers.

The fire broke out in the lower deck garage of the vessel but there were differing accounts of when it started. Initial reports said the fire began at around 6am local time (4am Irish time) but Italian officials put the time at 4.30am.

– (Reuters)