MS Jan Heweliusz

MS Jan Heweliusz in 1986, damaged after a fire
History
Name: MS Jan Heweliusz
Owner: PLO (Polish Oceanliners)
Builder: Trosvik Verksted A/S
Completed: 1977
Identification: IMO number: 7527904
Fate: Sunk in the Baltic Sea on January 14, 1993.
Status: Sunk
General characteristics M/S Jan Heweliusz
Class and type: RoRo-Ferry
Tonnage: 3015 BRT
Length: 125,66 m
Beam: 17,02 m
Installed power: CODAD 4 x Sulzer 10AL25/30, 7400 PS total
Speed: 16,75 knots
Capacity: 2035 tons (up to 47 trucks)

MS Jan Heweliusz, owned by PLO (Polish Oceanliners) and operated by its daughter company PLO EuroAfrica, was a Polish ferry named after astronomer Johannes Hevelius (Polish: Jan Heweliusz).

Built in Norway in 1977, the ferry served on the route Ystad-Świnoujście. In the early hours of 14 January 1993, while sailing with 64 passengers and crew from Świnoujście to Ystad, it capsized and sank in 27 metres of water off Cape Arcona on the coast of Rügen in the Baltic Sea.[1] The accident claimed the lives of 20 crewmen and 35 passengers. 10 bodies were never found. 9 people were rescued. To-date, the sinking of Jan Heweliusz is the most deadly peacetime maritime disaster involving a Polish ship.[1]

1986 fire

In September 1986, the ship suffered a serious fire. No one on board was injured, but the ship was heavily damaged. The ship was repaired by coating the damaged areas with 60 tons of concrete, which increased the weight of the ship and dangerously affected its stability, although this was apparently an illegal method.[1] [2]

1993 sinking

At 4:10 am on Jan 14 1993, the ship started listing in hurricane-force winds, estimated at 180 km/h. It capsized at 5:12am. The waves were up to 6 metres high and ferries in the nearby port of Sassnitz had been cancelled. Prior to its sinking, Heweliusz had been involved in 28 incidents, including collisions with fishing boats, listing, engine failure, and a fire in 1986. It had ballast problems and had also damaged its hull in Ystad during docking, but this was not reported to the port authorities and only makeshift repairs were made. It sailed two hours late, carrying 10 railway carriages from 5 European countries.

The Marine Chamber of Appeals in Gdynia blamed the accident on the poor technical condition of the ship, with the captain, who died in the accident, also being blamed for allowing the ship to sail in such an unseaworthy state.

In 2005, the European Court of Human Rights in Strasburg ruled that the official investigation of the sinking was not impartial and granted 4600 euros in damages each to eleven relatives of the victims.[1]

Today, the wreck of the ship is located at the depth of 27 metres and is frequently visited by divers.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Rzeczpospolita article from 12-01-2008
  2. Głos Szczeciński. Tajemniczy beton z "Heweliusza". Accessed: 2016-06-21.

External links

Coordinates: 54°36′N 14°13′E / 54.600°N 14.217°E / 54.600; 14.217

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.