
Norwegian man sleeps through massive container ship ploughing into his garden
The 135-metre container ship ran aground around 5am local time on Thursday in Byneset, west of Trondheim.
But Johan Helberg had no idea how close his house had come to disaster until he was woken by a neighbour.
'I didn't hear anything. I was sleeping seven meters from the bow,' he told Norwegian media NRK.
'It was lucky that it went ashore there. Five metres further south, and it would have entered the bedroom. And that wouldn't have been particularly pleasant.'
Mr Helberg's neighbour Jostein Jorgensen said he woke up to the sound of a ship on the fjord.
'I looked out the window and saw a boat heading straight for shore,' he told NRK. 'I went out and cawed and shouted and whistled without anything happening.'
Mr Jorgensen said he then rushed over to Mr Helberg's house to try to wake him up.
'We woke up to the neighbour loudly ringing the doorbell. He said, 'haven't you seen the ship?'' Mr Helberg said.
'I went to the window and was quite astonished to see a big ship,' he told the Guardian. 'I had to bend my neck to see the top of it. It was so unreal.'
The cargo ship had 16 people on board when it ran aground, NRK reports, and no injuries were reported. Local police have started an investigation into the incident, and they told the news outlet there was one suspect.
Police have conducted initial interviews with the ship's crew, and on Friday two Norwegian media outlets are reporting the possible reason for the crash was that a person fell asleep.
Police had previously ruled out drugs or alcohol as factors in the crash.
While the investigation continues, so too does work to move the ship.
An attempt on Thursday morning to refloat the ship was unsuccessful, and a second attempt was planned for Thursday evening at the next high tide.
Bente Hetland, CEO of the shipping company North Sea Container Line, told NRK that the ship had been in incidents before, but it has been sailing the Norwegian coast for 15 years. Ms Hetland said there had been no previous major incidents that had harmed the crew or the environment.
Mr Helberg said he believed it would take some time for the ship to be refloated.
'I am very excited to see how they are going to get this ship off, it will probably require a lot of effort,' he said.
"It's a very bulky new neighbour but it will soon go away," he added, the BBC reports.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
2 days ago
- The Independent
Shooting at mosque in Sweden leaves 2 wounded, police say
Police say two people have been injured following a shooting near a mosque in Sweden. Local media say at least one person has been taken to the hospital after being shot as they were leaving Friday prayers. The extent of the injuries is unclear but police say they have opened a preliminary investigation into attempted murder. The perpetrator has yet to be apprehended, and it's unclear if they were targeting the mosque or specific individuals. Emergency services were present in large numbers at the scene and police have urged the public to stay away.


Times
3 days ago
- Times
Russian hackers ‘opened taps on Norwegian dam'
The head of Norway's main security agency has said Russian hackers seized control of a dam for four hours in April. The cyberattack on the facility in Bremanger, 100 miles north of Bergen on the western coast, involved fully opening the flow valves, releasing nearly 500 litres of water a second. It is the first time the Norwegian authorities have publicly identified Russia as the culprit. Beate Gangas, director of the PST, Norway's security service, said the Bremanger incident was part of a new wave of attacks from 'pro-Russian cyber actors'. • NHS hospitals 'easy targets' for Russian hackers 'The aim of this type of operation is to influence and to cause fear and chaos among the general population,' she said in a speech. 'Our Russian neighbour has become more dangerous.' At the time of the hack, independent analysts said the damage had been minor and the real significance of the incident was symbolic. Hydroelectric dams produce more than 90 per cent of Norway's power and there is concern about the potential for sabotage. In this case, however, the dam on Lake Risevatnet is thought to primarily control the supply of freshwater to a nearby fish farm. The watercourse it supplies can handle significantly higher flow volumes than those unleashed by the hackers, and the fault was detected relatively quickly and remedied. • Civilisation depends on undersea cables. What happens if they break? Nor does the cyberattack appear to have been sophisticated: Breivika Eiendom, the dam's owner, indicated that the hackers had probably seized on a weak password. Yet the incident has driven home the vast scope for electronic sabotage of Europe's physical infrastructure, amid warnings that the Russian military intelligence service and its network of hackers have begun aggressively targeting private sector companies involved in supporting Ukraine. In February the PST's annual national security report said hackers working on behalf of Russia, China, Iran and North Korea posed a 'significant' and 'unpredictable' threat to Norway. It also noted an 'increased likelihood that Russian intelligence services will try to carry out sabotage operations in Norway'. Norwegian officials suspect that Russia orchestrated the sabotage of an underwater fibre-optic data cable linking the Svalbard archipelago to mainland Norway in January 2022, weeks before the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. However, the Russian embassy in Oslo dismissed the claim that Russia was behind the attack on the dam as 'unfounded and politically motivated'.


The Guardian
3 days ago
- The Guardian
Russian hackers seized control of Norwegian dam, spy chief says
Russian hackers took control of a Norwegian dam this year, opening a floodgate and allowing water to flow unnoticed for four hours, Norway's intelligence service has said. The admission, by the Norwegian Police Security Service (PST), marks the first time that Oslo has formally attributed the cyber-attack in April on Bremanger, western Norway, to Moscow. The attack on the hydropower dam, which produces electricity, released 500 litres (132 gallons) of water a second for four hours until the incident was detected and stopped. The head of PST, Beate Gangås, said on Wednesday: 'Over the past year, we have seen a change in activity from pro-Russian cyber actors.' The Bremanger incident was an example of such an attack, she added. 'The aim of this type of operation is to influence and to cause fear and chaos among the general population. Our Russian neighbour has become more dangerous.' The incident did not cause any injuries or damage because the water level of the river and the dam, which is close to the town of Svelgen, was a long way below flood capacity. The alleged perpetrators reportedly published a three-minute video, watermarked with the name of a pro-Russian cybercriminal group, on Telegram on the day of the attack. Kripos, Norway's organised crime police unit, told the Aftenposten newspaper it was 'aware this group brought together several actors who commit crime in the cyber domain' and had been linked to several cyber-attacks against businesses in the west in recent years. Gangås said: 'Russian intelligence services spend significant resources identifying, cultivating and recruiting contacts in Norway. Norwegian citizens could be good sources of information for them.' Intelligence services in Norway, which produces the majority of its electricity using hydropower dams, had previously warned of the potential risk of such attacks on energy infrastructure. Norway and Russia share a 123-mile (198km) border, with a crossing at Storskog, Europe's only open Schengen border with Russia. The Russian embassy in Oslo said Gangås's statements were 'unfounded and politically motivated'. It told Reuters news agency: 'It is obvious that the PST is unsuccessfully trying to substantiate the mythical threat of Russian sabotage against Norwegian infrastructure this year, which it itself invented in its February (annual) report.' Last year, Richard Moore, the head of Britain's Secret Intelligence Service, MI6, accused Russia of a 'staggeringly reckless campaign' of sabotage in Europe, in part to frighten countries from helping Ukraine. Moscow denies the allegation. The PST has been contacted for comment.