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-Short Attention Span Theater- |
Abandoned Russian cruise ship located |
2013-02-23 |
![]() According to a document from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, the Lyubov Orlova has been spotted at roughly 1,300 nautical miles from the Irish coast. The details were listed in a maritime update put out by the intelligence agency, which analyzes satellite imagery and creates detailed maps for the US government. With rats as its only passengers, the Lyubov Orlova had left Canada's shores on January 23 to be towed to a scrapyard in the Dominican Republic. But the next day, the cable snapped, leaving it stranded in international waters. It was then secured by the Atlantic Hawk, a supply vessel in the offshore oil industry, which managed to tow the ship before it drifted off yet again. Canada's transport authority has said the ship -- abandoned for two years -- was no longer its concern, as it had left the country's waters. But authorities said the owner was responsible for its movements. Earlier this week, Canadian officials acknowledged they did not know the location of the vessel, since the ship's global positioning system was no longer working. But the information gathered on the ship's location shows the derelict vessel is slowly heading towards Europe, having drifted at least 435 nautical miles toward the European coastline. |
Posted by:ryuge |
#11 The Rats are NOT dead, they're cannibals. |
Posted by: Redneck Jim 2013-02-23 19:30 |
#10 The rats have to be dead by now. Right? |
Posted by: Charles 2013-02-23 17:50 |
#9 "Also, ship breaking is more profitable if one does not need to be concerned about safety or environmental regulations." ... or large man-eating rats. I say scuttle the thing. The US Navy must have some new secret weapon that they need to test :-) |
Posted by: Raider 2013-02-23 14:04 |
#8 Also, ship breaking is more profitable if one does not need to be concerned about safety or environmental regulations. |
Posted by: Glenmore 2013-02-23 13:46 |
#7 Kojo, ship-breaking requires lots of extremely cheap human labor. It's popular in Bangladesh, Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka for the same reasons. |
Posted by: Steve White 2013-02-23 13:17 |
#6 Why would a worthless Russian ship be towed for scrap from Canada to the Dominican Republic? What could possibly make it cost effective? If it wasn't Canada's concern, why not recoup any expenses by scrapping it there? Incidentally, that is the same port Menendez and Melgen tried to get a lock on security contracts, as only 5% of cargo is inspected;it also is a hub for drugs from South America on to No. America and Europe. A pointless story or are we missing the point? |
Posted by: Kojo Wholuse5660 2013-02-23 12:58 |
#5 Haven't we already seen that movie? Or was it that movie? |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2013-02-23 12:11 |
#4 With rats as its only passengers Democrats using it for a conference? |
Posted by: Alanc 2013-02-23 11:17 |
#3 Use the damn thing for target practice. Justify it as a hazzard to navigation |
Posted by: Cheaderhead 2013-02-23 10:05 |
#2 Why you'd think the wiley chinee or Russian rosats would know where it was? No? No lights? It was running quiet? Stormy weather? |
Posted by: Shipman 2013-02-23 01:31 |
#1 With rats as its only passengers, the Lyubov Orlova had left Canada's shores on January 23 to be towed to a scrapyard in the Dominican Republic. Jeez...maybe Carnival will buy it? |
Posted by: tu3031 2013-02-23 00:23 |