Crew of ship that collided with Baltimore bridge all Indians: Company
The Singapore-flagged container ship "Dali" collided with one of the pillars of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore at approximately 1:30 am local time
PTI
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Grace Ocean Private Ltd owns the vessel and the ship’s movement was outbound from Baltimore to Colombo
New York, 26 March
The entire 22-member crew of the
cargo ship that struck a major bridge in Baltimore early Tuesday, causing it to
snap and plunge into the river, are Indians who alerted authorities about a
“power issue” before the collision.
The Singapore-flagged container
ship "Dali" collided with one of the pillars of the Francis Scott Key
Bridge in Baltimore at approximately 1:30 am local time. According to the
vessel information provided by the Synergy Marine Group, the crew was “all
Indian, 22 in total”.
The "Dali" has a capacity
of 10,000 TEU and onboard Units: of 4,679 TEU. Grace Ocean Private Ltd owns the
vessel and the ship’s movement was outbound from Baltimore to Colombo.
Owners and managers of the
Singapore-flagged container ship “Dali” report that the vessel collided with
one of the pillars of the Francis Scott Key Bridge, Baltimore, whilst under
pilotage with two pilots onboard, at approximately 01:30 local time on March
26, ship management company Synergy Marine Group said in a statement. "All
crew members, including the two pilots, have been accounted for and there are
no reports of any injuries. There has also been no pollution," it said.
Whilst the exact cause of the
incident is yet to be determined, the "Dali" has now mobilised its
Qualified Individual Incident Response service. The crew of the cargo ship
alerted authorities about a “power issue” before the collision, Maryland
Governor Wes Moore said, adding that this Mayday call enabled workers to stop
more vehicular traffic from coming onto the bridge.
"We can confirm that the crew
notified authorities of a power issue,” Moore told reporters. Moore was asked
whether the crew on the "Dali" ship alerted authorities about losing
propulsion and was in trouble. “Yes”, Moore replied when asked whether the crew
had lost power on the ship.
Moore said the ship was coming in
“at a very rapid speed”. The ship lost power and rammed into the bridge,
causing the span to buckle into the river below and plunging a construction
crew and several vehicles into the dangerously cold waters.
"We do know that the
investigation is currently going on. But I have to say I'm thankful for the
folks who, once the warning came up and once notification came up that there
was a Mayday, who literally by being able to stop cars from coming over the
bridge. These people are heroes, they saved lives last night,” he said. “We are
thankful that between the Mayday and the collapse we had officials who were
able to begin to stop the flow of traffic so more cars were not up on the
bridge,” he said.
Moore added that the preliminary
investigation “points to an accident. We haven't seen any credible evidence of
a terrorist attack”.
Authorities have said that two
people have been rescued and a search is on for six more persons.
The US Coast Guard and local
officials have been notified, and the owners and managers are fully cooperating
with Federal and State government agencies under an approved plan. "We are
horrified by what has happened in Baltimore, and our thoughts are with all of
those affected," Maersk said in a statement. "We can confirm that the
container vessel 'Dali', operated by charter vessel company Synergy Group, is
time chartered by Maersk and is carrying Maersk customers’ cargo. No Maersk
crew and personnel were onboard the vessel," the statement said.
"We are closely following the
investigations conducted by authorities and Synergy, and we will do our utmost
to keep our customers informed," it said.
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