NEW DELHI - India’s coastguard said June 10 it was battling to stop a fierce blaze that has engulfed a Singapore-flagged container ship listing off the southern coast that broke out a day earlier.
The 268m container vessel MV Wan Hai 503 carrying 22 crew members caught fire some 78 nautical miles off India’s Beypore port on June 9.
Eighteen crew members were rescued by the Indian coastguard and navy, with four still missing.
Indian Coast Guard said June 10 that “fires and explosions persist” on the vessel, which was tilting at around “10-15 degrees”.
They issued photographs that showed flames leaping from the stacked containers, with the ship surrounded by thick plumes of billowing black smoke.
Initial images on June 9 showed heavy containers that had seemingly been hurled up by a powerful explosion on board, with the coastguard saying that some were in the water.
Singapore’s Maritime and Port Authority had said there were “some injuries” among the crew.
Coastguard vessels alongside the blackened and burning ship poured jets of water onto the flames, according to video footage released.
The MV Wan Hai container ship is the second to run into trouble off India’s southern coast within weeks.
A Liberian-flagged container ship with hazardous cargo sank off the coast of Kerala on May 24. The Indian navy rescued all 24 crew members. AFP
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