
India battles container ship fire with 'hazardous' cargo
India's coast guard said it was battling to extinguish fires raging on a container ship carrying "hazardous" cargo off the southern coast to prevent a "potential ecological disaster".
The 268-metre Singapore-flagged container vessel MV Wan Hai 503, carrying 22 crew members four of whom are missing caught fire about 78 nautical miles off India's Beypore port on Monday.
Photographs released by the coast guard soon after the blaze broke out showed heavy containers scattered about the vessel, as if hurled up by a powerful explosion. Since then, fire has engulfed the ship.
"The vessel is carrying 2,128 metric tons of fuel and hundreds of containers, including hazardous cargo, posing a serious risk to the marine environment and regional shipping routes," the coast guard said in a statement late Wednesday.
It did not provide more details on the contents of the cargo, but said that "the situation remains critical".
Eighteen crew members were rescued by the Indian coast guard and navy. Four crew one from Indonesia, two from Taiwan and one from Myanmar were listed as missing.
The coast guard said it had "winched five salvage team members" and a diver onto the burning ship.
"With the fire yet to be fully extinguished, efforts to establish a towline and pull the vessel away from the coast are underway to prevent a potential ecological disaster", it said.
"Intensive firefighting efforts... have significantly reduced visible flames", it added.
"However, the fire remains active in the inner decks and near fuel tanks."
Seven vessels, including five coast guard vessels as well as airplanes and a helicopter, were engaged in trying to put out the fire.
The MV Wan Hai 503 container ship is the second to run into trouble off India's southern coast within weeks.
A Liberian-flagged container ship, also with hazardous cargo, sank off the coast of Kerala late last month. The Indian navy rescued all 24 crew members.
ash/pjm/tym

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


Hindustan Times
33 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Would you pay extra for luxury water. Wait. What IS luxury water, anyway?
We were taught in school that water is colourless, tasteless and odourless. That couldn't be further from the truth, says Ganesh Iyer. It's not just a line he throws around for drama, it's the foundation of his life's work. Iyer is 48 and has spent nearly 30 years in the beverage industry, and has been a water sommelier since 2017. Turns out, there's more to the substance than two atoms of hydrogen and one of oxygen, science textbook be damned. In Iyer's world, water can be swirled, sniffed and paired like wine. One sip, and he can tell you whether it comes from an alpine spring, an underground aquifer, or from a municipal tap. Water, like wine, tastes subtly different based on where it's been, the minerals it contains and how it's purified. Iyer has helped launch bottled-water brands such as Evian, Perrier and Himalaya. But India, he says, has had a pretty icy reception to his work. 'None of the hospitality institutes, be it IHM or OCLD, teach water as a subject,' he says. So, those in the business still view water as lacking flavour or smell. That's where he steps in. One restaurateur signed him on after he couldn't figure out why his Jaipur restaurant's laal maas tasted different when it was cooked in Udaipur, despite using the same recipe and cooks who'd received the same training. Iyer worked out that Udaipur's limestone-heavy local water masked the spice, flattening the dish's punch. But mostly, getting the food industry to take water seriously is tough. Most commercial kitchens rely on RO-purified water, a process that aggressively filters the water and strips it of most of its natural minerals. 'It's dead water,' Iyer says. 'It quenches thirst but does nothing else.' Worse, it sabotages good tea. 'If you're charging ₹450 to ₹500 for a chamomile and brewing it with RO, you're cheating the guest,' he says. Filtered tap water brings out the taste better. Much of what gets piped into Indian homes is unsafe to drink – even textbooks get this bit right. But with packaged drinking water, we may be giving up an entire bouquet of taste and flavour. High-quality water should not just be clean, it should come from a single source, with high levels of minerals such as calcium and magnesium. It's what the industry calls fine or premium water, and stirs in some derision. Because fine water can cost up to 10 times more. At posh restaurants worldwide, water menus are already part of the experience. Three Bays from Australia claims to come from a three-billion-year-old aquifer. Donat MG from Slovenia advertises 6,200 mg per litre of magnesium (regular hard water doesn't have more than 40 mg per litre). Svalbardi is sourced from melting Arctic icebergs in Norway. And water from Bhutan is said to be rich in calcium. Premium water makes up less than 1% of India's bottled water market. And Iyer's job is made doubly tough by bottled-water companies who also market ocean water, mushroom water, collagen water, alkaline water and black water, exaggerating their health benefits. 'Just because celebrities drink it doesn't mean it's good for you,' he warns. 'They also have elite healthcare and private chefs. That's not your reality.' Drink water that is clean. Drink it to stay hydrated. Don't expect it to help you lose weight or improve immunity. If you can afford it, pick a brand that offers single-source water. And if you enjoy the taste, drink more of it. It's not that complicated. 'Even if you can't switch entirely, know what you're drinking. At least stop calling it tasteless.' From HT Brunch, June 14, 2025 Follow us on
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
34 minutes ago
- First Post
265 killed, PM Modi in Ahmedabad: The big developments in Air India plane crash
Air India has confirmed the death toll from flight AI171, which was carrying 230 passengers and 12 crew members, and crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad airport, killing 241 people. The sole survivor, Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, is currently undergoing treatment in the hospital. This is the first fatal crash involving a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner since it entered commercial service in 2011 read more This is the first fatal crash involving a 787-8 Dreamliner since the aircraft began commercial operations in 2011. Reuters A London-bound Air India flight crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad on Thursday, killing 241 people on board. Only one person survived the crash. Air India confirmed the number of deaths in a post on X at 12.41 am on Friday. It is one of the worst aviation disasters the country has seen. Read Ahmedabad Plane Crash Live Updates The Boeing 787-8 hit a medical college building and caught fire just minutes after leaving Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The airline said there were 230 passengers on board: 169 were Indian nationals, 53 British, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian. The remaining 12 were two pilots and 10 crew members. ALSO READ | A Manipuri airhostess, a Kerala nurse… The victims of the Ahmedabad plane crash Hours after the crash, several facts have come out, but many questions still remain unanswered. What caused the plane crash? What does the black box reveal? In this explainer, we look at everything we know and do not yet know about the crash. Let's find out: Air India plane crash: What we know about the incident 1. Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the crash site on Friday and was briefed about the situation before heading to the hospital where the injured are being treated. He was accompanied by Union Civil Aviation Minister Rammohan Naidu as he assessed the situation on the ground. 2. Air India confirmed the death toll from flight AI171. The plane was carrying 230 passengers and 12 crew members when it crashed shortly after take-off, killing 241 people. The only survivor is receiving treatment in the hospital. 3. The passengers included 169 Indians, 53 British nationals, seven Portuguese nationals and one Canadian. Air India said the lone survivor is a British citizen of Indian origin. 4. The aircraft crashed into the BJ Medical College in Ahmedabad. According to the Federation of All India Medical Association (FAIMA), the victims at the site included five MBBS students, one postgraduate resident doctor and the wife of a superspecialist. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 5. This is the first fatal crash involving a 787-8 Dreamliner since the aircraft began commercial operations in 2011. 6. Videos of the incident show the plane flying unusually low and struggling to gain height before hitting the ground and erupting in flames. The crash happened around 1:38 pm. 7. After take-off, the crew sent a Mayday call but did not respond to follow-up messages. The aircraft went down just outside the airport limits in the Meghani Nagar area. It reportedly lost signal at 625 feet and crashed roughly nine minutes after take-off clearance. 8. Among those who died was former Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani . He was on his way to London to visit his family. The plane was carrying 230 passengers and 12 crew members. Reuters 9. Union Home Minister Amit Shah said rescue efforts were hampered by extremely high temperatures caused by the burning of around 1.25 lakh litres of aviation fuel. 10. Air India has set up a helpline for updates and information. The number is 1800 5691 444. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD ALSO READ | In photos & videos: How the ill-fated Air India flight crashed in Ahmedabad 11. Around two dozen ambulances reached the scene, with several injured people taken to the hospital. Police have redirected traffic away from the area. 12. Access roads to the airport and crash zone have been sealed to allow rescue teams to work without delay. The Indian Army's medical team has joined the police and fire department in the ongoing relief efforts. 13. Civil Aviation Minister Naidu has urged officials to speed up the investigation into what is one of the deadliest plane crashes in the world in recent years. 14. The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB), under the Ministry of Civil Aviation, will lead the inquiry. A team from the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) will also be travelling to India to help with the investigation. 15. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said the aircraft was piloted by Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, who had 8,200 flying hours, and First Officer Clive Kundar, who had 1,100 hours. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Around two dozen ambulances reached the scene. Reuters Ahmedabad plane crash: What do we not know about the incident 1. The exact reason behind the crash has not been confirmed yet. Some aviation experts believe that possible overloading, a bird strike, or the rare failure of both engines could have stopped the plane from gaining enough lift after take-off, according to reports. 2. A key part of the investigation depends on recovering both black boxes from the aircraft. So far, one has been found: the one located at the rear of the plane, Hindustan Times reported. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation will take charge of examining the data. The search for the second black box is still going on. What is a black box? Despite its name, a black box is a bright orange device built to withstand heavy impact and fire. Every commercial aircraft carries two of them: one Flight Data Recorder (FDR) and one Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR). These devices record detailed information about the plane's performance and crew conversations. In this case, the black box could help confirm whether the crash was caused by a technical fault, engine failure, bird strike, on-board fire or explosion, or human error. With inputs from agencies


Time of India
42 minutes ago
- Time of India
Air India sets up assistance centres for families of passengers on Flight AI171
Live Events Air India has set up Friends & Relatives Assistance Centres at Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Delhi and Gatwick airports to provide support and take care of the needs of the families and loved ones of those on flight AI171. These centres are facilitating the travel of family members to... - (@ANI) June 13, 2025 (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel New Delhi: Air India has set up Friends & Relatives Assistance Centres at Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Delhi, and Gatwick airports to provide support and care for the needs of the families and loved ones of passengers on flight AI171.A total of 241 people onboard the Boeing 787-8 , Air India flight 171, including 12 crew members, have died in the deadly Ahmedabad plane crash , Air India confirmed post-midnight on a post on X on Friday, Air India informed that these centres facilitate the travel of family members to Ahmedabad and offer necessary assistance during this time. Furthermore, Air India has set up a dedicated passenger hotline number:For calls within India: 1800 5691 444For calls outside India: +91 8062779200Regular updates will be shared on Air India's X handle and the official site as further information becomes Air India requests that media personnel avoid calling the dedicated passenger hotline Air India Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director Campbell Wilson visited the AI-171 plane crash site in Gujarat's Ahmedabad on Friday."The 12-year-old Boeing 787-8 aircraft departed from Ahmedabad at 1338 Hours, carrying 230 passengers and 12 crew. The aircraft crashed shortly after take-off. We regret to inform you that, of the 242 aboard, there are 241 confirmed fatalities. The sole survivor is being treated in a hospital, Air India posted on flight, which was operating from Ahmedabad to London Gatwick on June 12, 2025, carried 169 Indian nationals, 53 British nationals, seven Portuguese nationals, and one Canadian passenger plane crashed near Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport in Gujarat's Ahmedabad into a resident doctors' hostel building shortly after take-off on one person has survived the deadly crash, the airline authorities said, adding that the survivor was a British national of Indian origin.A formal investigation has been launched by the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) into the deadly crash of Air India flight 171 that killed 241 people onboard, Union Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu confirmed on aircraft was piloted by Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, a Line Training Captain with 8,200 hours of flying experience, assisted by First Officer Clive Kundar, who had logged 1,100 flying to Air Traffic Control (ATC), the aircraft departed from Ahmedabad at 1339 IST (0809 UTC) from runway 23. It made a Mayday call to ATC, but thereafter, the aircraft did not respond to the calls made by after departing Runway 23, the aircraft fell on the ground outside the airport perimeter. An official said heavy black smoke was coming from the accident Tata Group has announced a compensation of Rs 1 crore for the families of each person who lost their lives in the crash.