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Cargo ship crashes into Norway man's backyard
Cargo ship crashes into Norway man's backyard

Straits Times

time23-05-2025

  • General
  • Straits Times

Cargo ship crashes into Norway man's backyard

Mr Johan Helberg after a container ship ran aground a few meters from his house in the Trondheimsfjord outside Byneset, Norway, on May 22. PHOTO: EPA-EFE OSLO, Norway – Mr Johan Helberg woke up on the morning of May 22 to find his backyard view of a Norwegian fjord transformed into the side of a giant ship. An enormous cargo ship, the NCL Salten, had run aground at about 5am (0300 GMT ) May 22 , barely missing his house on the shore in Byneset, a part of the city of Trondheim in central Norway. Mr Helberg had slept through it all until alerted by a neighbour. 'I was sleeping soundly, deeply, and then I heard a dinging sound, which I wondered might be my doorbell,' he said in an interview on the night of May 22 . 'I thought, who in the world rings the doorbell at 5.45am in the morning? I looked out the window, and (my neighbour) said: 'Haven't you seen the ship?'' The ship was towering over the house, having missed the bedroom by only about 5m . Had the ship's vector been slightly different, Mr Helberg said, the vessel could have 'picked up speed and plowed into the house. It's completely surreal'. 'I impressed myself by staying cool,' said Mr Helberg, a retired museum director. 'I have seen and been through worse.' The neighbour, in contrast, had seen the ship come plowing onto land and had been 'in shock all day', Mr Helberg said – as were many other Norwegians, startled to see photos and videos of a gigantic container vessel wedged onto an unassuming shore. 'Big ships pass us now and then,' Mr Helberg said, but mostly at a distance, keeping to the deeper waters of the fjord. 'We don't usually see ships right outside our living room window,' he added. 'So this is especially strange.' Norwegian coastal authorities said in a statement on May 22 that no injuries or oil spills had been reported. The 134m -long ship had entered the fjord on the way to the town of Orkanger, authorities said, and it was not immediately clear what had led to the crash. 'As long as the vessel remains stationary, there is no danger of further incidents,' a police official, Mr Martin Hammervik Aarhoug, said on the night of May 22 . 'After the ship grounded, there was a clay landslide about 100m wide that authorities believe was caused by vibrations from the ship coming ashore,' said Ms Anette Bonnevie Wollebæk, who is with the Norwegian Coastal Administration. A view of the container ship that ran aground, almost hitting a house, in the Trondheimsfjord outside Byneset, Norway. PHOTO: EPA-EFE Police had set up cordons around the landslide to prevent anyone from falling in. It was not immediately clear where the crew members were on the night of May 22 . Mr Helberg said there were 16 men onboard, with a Norwegian captain and a crew of Russians and Ukrainians. He said he and his partner had spoken with them, shouting from his yard up to the ship, to find out whether anyone was hurt, but that they had not addressed having crashed their boat on his property. 'This is a serious incident, and we are grateful that nobody was injured in the grounding,' Ms Bente Hetland, chief executive of the company that had chartered the ship, NCL, said in a statement. For now, Ms Hetland added, 'we do not know what caused the incident and are awaiting the conclusion of the ongoing investigation'. Ms Hetland said that NCL and the ship's owner, Baltnautic, were working with authorities, and that they were assessing damage to the ship and hoping to safely 'refloat the vessel and restore normal operations as swiftly as possible'. NCL and a salvage company tried to use a tugboat to pull the vessel at high tide on the evening of May 22 , but they could not do so, authorities said. Bystanders watch a container ship by the shore in the Trondheimsfjord outside Byneset by Trondheim, Norway, after it ran aground. PHOTO: AFP Mr Helberg had his own ideas about what happened. He said that the fjord's entrance bends a little, forcing ships that enter it to quickly turn. The NCL Salten, he said, adjusted course once but not twice – putting it on a path for his garden. 'I've actually seen a couple of ships before that seemed to go suspiciously far before realising something was wrong,' he said. By the night of May 22 , the ship was still stuck, and Mr Helberg was fielding calls from friends, family, acquaintances and international news organisations. Online, his friends and family expressed relief that he was OK – and teased him about his unexpected guest, with one writing: 'Nothing beats the view from Byneset on a beautiful spring morning, does it? Mr Helberg agreed. 'People often say this is the best view of the Trondheimsfjord,' he said. 'We're right at the tip of the peninsula outside Trondheim. So we have a view in every direction.' NYTIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

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