Ī soil-carrying trawler, owned by the Maishadi AMS Brick Field, collided with the sand barge Iqbal Hossain on the Dakatia River during a dense fog, and promptly capsized. Julietta D was subsequently towed in to Rotterdam, South Holland, Netherlands. Her 18 crew were evacuated by helicopter. Storm Corrie: The German-operated Maltese-flagged bulk carrier was abandoned while sinking at the IJmuiden outer anchorage, in the North Sea after being struck by the tanker Pechora Star ( Malta) while at anchor in a storm. The boat encountered heavy waves and strong winds and sank after departing the Port of Celestún on 29 January. Of the estimated 70 people aboard, six died, 34 were rescued, and another 30 were reported missing. Ī migrant boat sank off the coast of Zarzis, Tunisia after departing from Libya on a voyage to Italy. The container ship ran aground while on a voyage from Sharjah to Abu Dhabi. The damage was considered irreparable, and on 1 February, United Salvage of New South Wales started salvage work. No people were aboard the tugs at the time of collision. It was submerged on the bottom, but still secured to its dock, and the Tasmanian Environmental Protection Authority had started a cleanup effort to deal with large amounts of leaking fuel. The tugboat was rammed by the cement carrier Goliath ( Australia) in Devonport, Tasmania at 11:50 AM while docked in Berth 4 West. The vessel was then towed to a shipyard on 10 February. Although the yacht was quickly moved further up the beach by salvage crews, proper salvage work started on 5 February, and completed on 9 February at 12:30 PM. Two people were aboard at the time one person was evacuated, while the other stayed on the boat. The 55-foot (17 m) yacht ran aground on South-Head Beach, Ocracoke, North Carolina, United States at 1:00 AM after its steering system failed. Five bodies were recovered, and the search for the rest of the passengers was called off on 27 January. Of the people aboard, one person, Juan Esteban Montoya Caicedo, survived. Ī 25-foot (7.6 m) motor boat capsized in rough weather roughly 40 miles (64 km) east of Florida's Fort Pierce Inlet while smuggling 40 migrants from Bimini, Bahamas to the United States. The cargo ship ran aground on the northwest Crete coast in Kissamos Bay in a storm, reportedly broke in half.
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