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One body recovered as hundreds still trapped aboard burning ferry

Rescuers have so far only managed to get 161 of the 478 people on the stricken “Norman Atlantic” to safety.

Updated at 5.33pm

Prothema Prothema

DESPERATE PASSENGERS PLEADED by mobile phone live on TV to be saved from a burning ferry adrift off Albania today as rescuers battled gale-force winds and billowing smoke to get to them.

“I cannot breath, we are all going to burn like rats — God save us,” cried one of the ship’s cooks in a call to his wife, she told journalists.

But with gusts of up to 100 kilometres per hour making any approach difficult and dangerous, rescuers have so far only managed to get 161 of the 478 people on the stricken “Norman Atlantic” to safety.

Shortly before 5pm, Italy’s coastguard said it had recovered the body of a man from water around the vessel, confirming the first casualty of the high-seas disaster.

The coastguard said the man’s body was taken aboard a patrol boat and was being taken to the Italian port of Brindisi. It was not clear exactly how the victim ended up in the water.

Greek officials said a woman who had been in the same part of the boat as the deceased man had been rescued. The name and nationality of the victim were not released.

The navy also said that a tugboat, the Marietta Barretta, had finally been able to attach itself to the burning ferry, raising hopes it could be stabilised sufficiently to accelerate the evacuation of those left on board.

Darkness falls

With night closing in, and the ship drifting towards Albania, tugs hosed its charred stern and midship with sea water.

The blaze was said to have broken out in the ferry’s car deck.

Despite a relative lull in the storm mid-afternoon, seas were still so violent that the task of plucking passengers from lifeboats and the ship itself was going painfully slowly, the Greek marine ministry confirmed.

As a flotilla of rescue vessels arrived from Greece, Italy and Albania, Greek army Super Puma helicopters winched passengers two by two from the bridge to the Italian ship, Europa, which is coordinating the rescue.

A Greek journalist on board the ship said rescuers were also trying to attach rope ladders to the ferry so passengers could climb down onto tug boats.

A Greek army helicopter had earlier made repeated attempts to save two passengers who fell from an escape chute and were at the mercy of six-metre waves. Their fate was unknown.

Seven merchant vessels had encircled the ferry in an attempt to shelter it from fierce Force 10 winds, officials said, as four Greek and Italian firefighting vessels began arriving from either side of the Adriatic.

Greek Marine Minister Miltiadis Varvitsiotis said an attempt would be made to tow the vessel, with a passenger on board confirming the bid to Greek TV.

Greece Ferry Fire Greece's Coast Guard spokesman Nikolaos Lagadianos. AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

euronews (in English) / YouTube

‘Our shoes were melting’

Italian navy spokesman Riccardo said the weather is “so bad we need an extraordinary level of support, which is effectively what is being put in place.”

Authorities would not say if there had been any deaths, but Rizzotto said one 58-year-old man has been airlifted to Italy suffering from hypothermia.

Freezing passengers huddled on the top deck and bridge of the ship told of their terror in calls to Greek television stations.

“We are on the top deck, we are soaked, we are cold and we are coughing from the smoke. There are women, children and old people,” passenger Giorgos Styliaras told Mega TV.

Another told the station that “our shoes were melting” from the heat of the fire when they were mustered in the ship’s reception area.

Haulage company boss Giannis Mylonas, who was in contact with three of his drivers on the vessel, said there were between 20 and 25 tanker trucks filled with olive oil on board.

Screengrab - Euronews Screengrab - Euronews

Flames subsiding

They are taking too long to find a way to help them. Let’s hope this ferry will stand the heat of the fire,” he told the station.

Vessels close to the ANEK Lines ferry, which caught fire 44 nautical miles northwest of the Greek island of Corfu, rushed to give assistance after picking up its distress signal at 0200 GMT, the Greek coast guard said.

The Greek maritime ministry said 268 of the passengers were Greek, with the crew made up of 22 Italians and 34 Greeks. But rest of the passengers were made up of 54 Turks, 44 Italians, 22 Albanians, 18 Germans, 10 Swiss, nine French, and Russian, Austrian, British and Dutch nationals.

A spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs said there were no reports of any Irish citizens aboard the ferry. The Department is monitoring developments via its embassy in Athens.

The “Norman Atlantic” had left the Greek port of Patras at 3.30pm Irish time on Saturday and made a stop at Igoumenitsa, before heading to the Italian port of Ancona when the fire took hold.

The car deck of the Italian-flagged ferry was believed to have been holding 195 vehicles when the fire broke out.

According to rescued passengers, the intense heat rapidly affected the rest of the ship. However, passengers stranded on the ship later seemed to be more worried by the storm, telling Greek TV the flames were subsiding.

The ship’s Greek operators ANEK Lines said “members of the crew were working with Italian and Greek authorities to evacuate the ferry”, but did not say how the fire started.

© – AFP 2014 with reporting by Daragh Brophy.

Read: Captain of Korean ferry that killed over 300 escapes death penalty but sentenced to 36 years in prison >

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    Mute Brian O'Grady
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    May 5th 2023, 3:07 PM

    What about Irish nurses, doctors and healthcare staff,

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    Mute Steve Bell
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    May 5th 2023, 3:50 PM

    @Brian O’Grady: Ah now Brian, let’s not forget the FFG motto “sure wouldn’t they be grateful to be second class citizens in their own country”
    People of Ireland should not forget at next elections

    484
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    Mute Leo Martin
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    May 5th 2023, 7:24 PM

    @Brian O’Grady: Irish Healthcare staff will keep emigrating as long as wages/conditions remain the same. However the biggest reason they leave home is because Ireland has not been in a position to provide them with a roof over their head and that doesn’t look like changing in the near to distant future. We will continue to try and lure African and Filipino healthcare workers who haven’t got a clue what they’re letting themselves in for as long as the housing crisis remains.

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    May 5th 2023, 9:44 PM

    @Leo Martin: Spot on!!!!!!

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    Mute Gary Kearney
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    May 5th 2023, 10:11 PM

    @Brian O’Grady: We do nit have eniugh oif them at prescent and rely on overseas staff.

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    Mute Joanne Stokes
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    May 7th 2023, 10:21 AM

    @Steve Bell: 100%

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    Mute Ollie O'Cleirigh
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    May 5th 2023, 3:33 PM

    A colleague of mine with an honors degree and masters degree with 4 years experience working in a stressful hospital environment is living in a mobile home at the back of her parents house. She and her boyfriend cannot afford a mortgage. The home is cold or very hot depending on external environmen. The stove in it nearly smothered them one night. She goes Into her parents house when it’s really cold. She travels 30 minutes to work every day. Where is her story being highlighted by the MoH? Where are the breaks for young home grown people in this country?

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    Mute Ollie O'Cleirigh
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    May 5th 2023, 3:52 PM

    @Ollie O’Cleirigh: and for those who ask why can’t she afford the mortgage it’s because she was paying almost 40% of her wages on rent in Dublin for 4 years. Why the he’ll aren’t we trying to keep young professionals in this country.

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    Mute Áine G
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    May 5th 2023, 3:29 PM

    Recently graduated Irish nurses on the lowest pay scale and healthcare assistants should get priority if they have to travel long distances to work. We should be aiming to keep our graduates here.

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    Mute Boyne Shark
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    May 5th 2023, 8:17 PM

    @Áine G: I seem to remember decades ago ( probably shouldn’t admit to being this old) that many Irish teaching hospitals had onsite dorms for trainee nurses, as times changed these were either sold off, demolished, refurbished for office use or just allowed to fall into ruin. So now the plan is to reinvest what will possibly amount to tens, if not hundreds of millions of euros into building dorms for foreign nurses, but our native staff who are struggling to find a vacant property let alone afford the exorbitant rent prices being asked. Obviously a deposit and mortgage would be well beyond the means of a nurses salary.
    If this isn’t a State sponsored recipe for creating a two tier system within nursing and deliberately causing financial friction within nursing, well I don’t know what is. It’ll lead to further unrest and demands for further, justified, pay increases.

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    Mute Mary Walshe
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    May 5th 2023, 4:23 PM

    Years ago, when nursing training was on an apprenticeship type basis, ie, training on the wards, there was always accommodation on site. It used to be called the nurses home… probably all turned into offices now.
    I think that’s the problem, too many pen pushers and middle management and not enough attention paid to the people at the coalface. Progress is all very well but we seem to have lost sight of what is really important, good bedside manner, time for patients and good old fashioned cleanliness!

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    Mute silvery moon
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    May 5th 2023, 7:16 PM

    @Mary Walshe: St. Luke’s Old Hospital in Clonmel they closed it down as a mental health hospital it was eventually turned into plus offices instead of accommodation for the medial staff of STGH many of them have to live in Cork or Waterford and commute to work everyday and because public transport is so bad in the area they all have to run car’s. Presently the HSE are turfing our older citizens from their nursing home of St. Patricks Cashel and many of the old buildings are now offices. They were to build a new state of the art facility on the site, but the new excuse is PARKING issues stating there wouldn’t be enough space. Yet the same hospital housed 300 patients at one time and no one had problems with parking and they can’t accommodate a 60 patient unit, this is what’s happing to our people and it not a money issue as the HSE has so much money they probably couldn’t account for 80% of it.

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    Mute Owen G Mc Ginley
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    May 5th 2023, 5:54 PM

    With all due respect to the Migrants and Refugees and their plight, but this Accommodation problem has been faced by Irish Nurses for years and the Government have done nothing about it. This Government appears to trying to do everything they can to inflame Racial Tensions by discriminating against the native Irish.

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    Mute Tony Murphy
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    May 5th 2023, 7:12 PM

    @Owen G Mc Ginley: Yes, this is one of the ironies of the policy. Same with the proposed ‘hate’ legislation which will serve to enrage the locals at what they see as discrimination against them.

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    Mute Colette Kearns
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    May 5th 2023, 10:52 PM

    @Owen G Mc Ginley: 100%But the worst thing about it is they know that!

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    Mute William Slevin
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    May 5th 2023, 3:12 PM

    I guess donnely thinks fxck our own…make it so they emergrate just so we can import from other country’s what we’ve already trained up here amongst ourselves….and this man isn’t a traitor to the general good of the irish people?

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    Mute Colette Kearns
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    May 5th 2023, 5:40 PM

    That’s absolutely appalling, Irish citizens being totally ignored!

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    Mute Benny Mchale
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    May 5th 2023, 3:29 PM

    This should be done with companies as well. If they’re setting up here offer them a tax discount for the first couple of years if they build apartments for their staff while they’re building a factory.

    Seems like every company in the world wants to locate here but if their staff can’t find a place to live they’ll have to look elsewhere. I’d say we’re very close to that point now.

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    Mute Colette Kearns
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    May 5th 2023, 7:14 PM

    @Benny Mchale: They do that already. It’s a pretty handy number for them as in you work for them, then hand back half your wages to them to rent their overpriced apartments!

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    Mute Tony Murphy
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    May 5th 2023, 7:08 PM

    We train up our nurses who then go abroad ad to replace them we recruit nurses from abroad. Anybody else feel that this might not be an ideal system?

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    Mute eoin fitzpatrick
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    May 5th 2023, 4:31 PM

    A higher wage for Dublin based nurses would make sense too

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    Mute Ali Sam
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    May 5th 2023, 7:10 PM

    The Twilight Zone has done it again and released Donnely upon us. This is a clear statement from this incompetent minister that Irish nurses, medical staff and the state of the healthcare are certainly not his priority or his problem. An absolute shocker of a minister and the degradation of Ireland and it’s services from all of these ministers is beyond recovery. As a nation we are letting it happen and must band together like we did for the water charges and make this change.

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    Mute Christine Hanway
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    May 5th 2023, 9:55 PM

    Would it not be cheaper to just pay your own qualified staff and you wouldn’t tobrely so heavily on migrant nurses.

    Or maybe if its not cheaper just do it anyway because they are paid Pittens as it is.

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    Mute Ronan Lawler
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    May 6th 2023, 12:19 AM

    Donnelly the chocolate teapot more waffle waffle

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    Mute scarke
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    May 5th 2023, 11:55 PM

    One of the main issues besides the housing issue is the fact that newly qualified nurses are not being offered decent contracts with an option to grow further in their career, that is one of the main issues they leave Ireland…and you cannot blame them

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    Mute Patricia Carolan
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    May 6th 2023, 12:30 PM

    Drogheda had a Nurses home it’s now offices. It accommodated both Irish and international nurses. It’s seems strange to train our nurses for emigration while we import others. No sense in that. The accommodation could be charged at a small sum to cover all costs and therefore making it cost effective for all.

    12
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    Mute Michael Dowling
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    May 6th 2023, 8:35 AM

    Why now ?, Why not eight years ago?. This should have been done for all nurses and doctors. Probably something to say they achieved at election time.

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    Mute Robert Halvey
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    May 6th 2023, 9:37 AM

    A person who lies over and over again has issues with their mom and dad.

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