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Cruise ship evacuated off Latvian coast

Sun May 4, 2008 6:33 AM EDT
world-news, ship, cruise-ship, stranded, latvia, mona-lisa, baltic-sea, stranded-cruise-ship
Gary Peach, Associated Press
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showing 1 of 3 photos
<p>Latvian tug boats attempt to pull the stranded Bahamas-registered cruise ship "Mona Lisa" off Latvia's northwest coast near Kolka, about 200 km (125 miles) from Riga, Sunday May 4, 2008. The Mona Lisa's captain agreed Monday May 5, to evacuate the ship after unsuccessful efforts to free it from a sand bank off Latvia's coast, coast guard officer Ruslans Kulesovs said. The cruise ship with 984 people on board ran aground early Sunday in the Baltic Sea, off the northwest coast of Latvia. The Mona Lisa had embarked from Kiel, Germany, and was destined for Riga when it ran aground on a sand bank about 17 kilometers (10 miles) from the Latvian coast in the Irbe Strait between Latvia and the Estonian island of Saaremaa. (AP Photo/ VA ''Tevijas Sargs'', Normunds Mezins)</p>

Latvian tug boats attempt to pull the stranded Bahamas-registered cruise ship "Mona Lisa" off Latvia's northwest coast near Kolka, about 200 km (125 miles) from Riga, Sunday May 4, 2008. The Mona Lisa's captain agreed Monday May 5, to evacuate the ship after unsuccessful efforts to free it from a sand bank off Latvia's coast, coast guard officer Ruslans Kulesovs said. The cruise ship with 984 people on board ran aground early Sunday in the Baltic Sea, off the northwest coast of Latvia. The Mona Lisa had embarked from Kiel, Germany, and was destined for Riga when it ran aground on a sand bank about 17 kilometers (10 miles) from the Latvian coast in the Irbe Strait between Latvia and the Estonian island of Saaremaa. (AP Photo/ VA ''Tevijas Sargs'', Normunds Mezins)

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RIGA — Latvia's coast guard on Monday removed more than 650 people from a stranded cruise ship after tugboats failed to pull the luxury liner off an underwater sand bank in the Baltic Sea.

In a five-hour operation, 651 passengers — most of them elderly Germans — and 11 crew members were transferred from the 201-meter-long (660-foot-long) Mona Lisa onto two naval ships, coast guard officials said.

They were taken about 37 kilometers (22 miles) to Ventspils, a port city in northwestern Latvia, and from there will go to the capital, Riga.

The passengers and crew members left the ship without incident, descending ladders to the naval ships, coast guard spokeswoman Liene Ulbina said.

She said 322 crew remained on board at the captain's orders as the salvage operation continues.

The 30,000-ton cruise ship ran aground early Sunday about 17 kilometers (10 miles) off Latvia's coast, as it passed through the Irbe Strait between Latvia and the Estonian island of Saaremaa.

It had been on its way from Kiel, Germany, to Riga with 984 people on board when it ran aground, officials said.

The Mona Lisa's captain, a Greek national, agreed to evacuate the ship Monday after unsuccessful efforts to free it from the sand bank.

Initially, rescuers pumped ballast water from the ship to lighten the load, and then on Monday they tried pumping out fuel. But they were unable to free the liner.

Coast guard officials said the ship, which went into service in 1966, was not damaged and passengers were never at risk. The cause of the accident has not been determined.

The passengers would be taken by bus and train from Ventspils to Riga, some 160 kilometers (100 miles) to the east, said Sofija Galindoma, a spokeswoman for Ventspils town council. They will be provided food and water, she added.

Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis was in Ventspils to help oversee the operation, his spokesman Krists Leiskalns said.

Coast guard chief Hermanis Cernovs was quoted by the Baltic News Service as saying the Mona Lisa's owner — Germany-based Lord Nelson Seereisen — has asked a Swedish company equipped with a powerful tugboat to help free the ship.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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