27/01/2014 09:50
Russian ghost ship ‘likely sunk’ – media
A Russian ship that was feared for the British and Irish coast with a crew of hundreds of rats is likely on the bottom of the Atlantic, RIA Novosti said, citing the Independent.
MV Lyubov Orlova disappeared last winter off the coast of Newfoundland when towed to the scrap yard.
The ship was sighted several times since, and earlier this week, British tabloid The Sun claimed it could have crossed the ocean, driven by storm.
The 4,250-ton cruise liner has no crew except rats, which would have had to resort to cannibalism to survive, the report claimed.
But an months-long search that employed satellites and aircraft turned up no evidence that the Lyubov Orlova is still above the water, the Independent said Saturday, citing an Irish coast guard.
“Our professional belief is that it has sunk. We’ve discussed it with the UK and Norway and Iceland and we're all pretty happy that it has probably sunk,” Chris Reynolds of the Irish Coast Guard was cited as saying.
The ship is worth up to $1 million as scrap metal, reports said earlier.
The Lyubov Orlova, named after a sex symbol of Stalin-era Soviet cinema, was launched in 1976 and refitted in 1998 for voyages in the Antarctic.
The mystery of the ship’s fate generated enough public interest to launch a website, Twitter account and line of merchandise.