WWII Bomb Halts Mersey Ferries
May 17, 2006
Around 250 passengers and crew were stranded on ferries in the River Mersey in northern England after a huge unexploded bomb was spotted, the U.K. coastguard said. The 500 pound bomb, dating from World War Two, was found by the British Royal Navy near Twelve Quays in Liverpool shortly before midnight on May 15. Two ferries, the Mersey Viking and Dublin Viking, bringing passengers from Belfast and Dublin across the Irish Sea, were forced to remain at sea May 16 while the explosive was dealt with, the coastguard said. One of the ferries had been stuck since before 4 a.m., a spokesman said. The device was also only 300 meters from a road tunnel linking Liverpool to Birkenhead under the Mersey. The tunnel was closed by police while the bomb was being dealt with. The coastguard spokesman said the Navy were slowly towing the bomb out to deeper water in the Irish Sea where it will be lowered to the sea bed and a diver will prepare it for a safe detonation. (Source: CNN International)
Related News
Singapore Boosts Undersea Might with Two New Submarines
2024 World Maritime Day: Fifty Years of SOLAS
Drug Gang Used Commercial Ships & Chinese Money Brokers, Italian Police Says
Maryland Sues Dali Owner, Operator Over Baltimore Bridge Collapse
Dutch See Rise in Russian LNG Imports, Urge Further Sanctions