Two
Albanian sailors have died during efforts to tow a wrecked Greek ferry that has
been adrift on the Adriatic Sea since a fire broke out on board. The official
death toll from the disaster has reached 12.
Police said
the sailors were on a tugboat when they were reportedly hit by a rope they had
attached to the charred Norman Atlantic ferry near the Albanian port of Vlore
on Tuesday.
"One
man died on the spot when one cable broke after it got stuck in the propeller.
The other died on board a few minutes ago when being assisted by a helicopter
medical team," a port authority official told Reuters.
The
crippled ferry has been drifting in the Adriatic Sea since one of its car decks
caught fire near the Greek island of Corfu on Sunday. The official death toll
from the disaster now stands at 12.
Dutch
company Smit Salvage is overseeing the operations to secure the ferry after 427
people, including 56 crew, were safely evacuated during a 36-hour rescue
mission that ended on Monday.
Martijn
Schuttevaer, a spokesman for Smit's parent company Royal Boskalis Smit, said
one line had been successfully connected to the ship early Tuesday, and that
the priority was to get a heavier tow line attached. It was not clear if that
was the operation underway when the Albanian sailors were struck.
‘Still
smoke' on board
The
Italian-flagged Norman Atlantic, chartered by Greek ferry operator ANEK Lines,
was sailing from Patras in western Greece to Ancona in Italy when the blaze
broke out on board.
According
to Schuttevaer, crews were still patrolling the vessel to put out any remaining
fire.
"There
is still smoke," he said.
Meanwhile,
authorities say discrepancies in the ferry's passenger list of 478 people are
making it difficult to know how many individuals were on board, or how many of
them, if any, are still missing.
Italian
Transport Minister Maurizio Lupi said it was possible there were illegal
migrants on board, and added that authorities were looking for a definitive
list of passengers to cross-check it with the names of survivors.
Italian and
Albanian magistrates ordered that the ship be seized in order to investigate
the cause of the fire, which is still unknown, and magistrates in both
countries are deciding together where the vessel should be towed, Italy's
Transport Ministry said in a statement.
nm/es (Reuters, AP, dpa)
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