Toronto Star

Ship’s cargo languished in port for years

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Prokoshev, the captain, joined the ship in Turkey after a mutiny over unpaid wages by a previous crew. Grechushki­n had been paid $1 million (U.S.) to transport the high-density ammonium nitrate to the port of Beira in Mozambique, the captain said.

The ammonium nitrate was purchased by the Internatio­nal Bank of Mozambique for Fabrica de Explosivos de Mocambique, a firm that makes commercial explosives, according to Baroudi and Partners, a Lebanese law firm representi­ng the ship’s crew, in a statement issued Wednesday.

Grechushki­n, who was in Cyprus at the time and communicat­ing by telephone, told the captain he didn’t have enough money to pay for passage through the Suez Canal. So he sent the ship to Beirut to earn some cash by taking on an additional cargo of heavy machinery.

But in Beirut, the machinery would not fit into the ship, which was about 30 or 40 years old, the captain said.

Then Lebanese officials found the ship unseaworth­y and impounded the vessel for failing to pay the port docking fees and other charges. When the ship’s suppliers tried to contact Grechushki­n for payment for fuel, food and other essentials, he could not be reached, having apparently abandoned the ship he had leased.

Six crew members returned home, but Lebanese officials forced the captain and three other crew members, all from Ukraine, to remain aboard until the debt issue was solved. Lebanese immigratio­n restrictio­ns prevented the crew members from leaving the ship, and they struggled to obtain food and other supplies, according to their lawyers.

Prokoshev, the captain, said Lebanese port officials took pity on the hungry crew and provided food. But, he added, they didn’t show any concern about the ship’s highly dangerous cargo. “They just wanted the money we owed,” he said.

Their plight attracted attention back in Ukraine, where news accounts described the stranded crew as “hostages,” trapped aboard an abandoned ship.

The captain, a Russian citizen, appealed to the Russian Embassy in Lebanon for help but got only snippy comments like, “Do you expect President Putin to send special forces to get you out,” he recalled.

Increasing­ly desperate, Prokoshev sold some of the ship’s fuel and used the proceeds to hire a legal team, and these lawyers also warned the Lebanese authoritie­s that the ship was in danger “of sinking or blowing up at any moment,” according to the law firm’s statement.

A Lebanese judge ordered the release of the crew on compassion­ate grounds in August 2014, and Grechushki­n, having resurfaced, paid for their passage back to Ukraine.

Grechushki­n could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

The crew’s departure left the Lebanese authoritie­s in charge of the ship’s deadly cargo, which was moved to a storage facility known as Hangar 12, where it remained until the explosion Tuesday.

Ammonium nitrate, when mixed with fuel, creates a powerful explosive commonly used in constructi­on and mining. But it has also been used to make explosive devices deployed by terrorists such as the 1995 Oklahoma City bomber, Timothy McVeigh, and the Islamic State group.

Sales of ammonium nitrate are regulated in the United States, and many European countries require it to be mixed with other substances to make it less potent.

The general manager of Beirut’s port, Hassan Koraytem, said in an interview that customs and security officials made repeated requests to Lebanon’s courts to have the volatile material moved. “But nothing happened,” he said.

“We were told the cargo would be sold in an auction,” he added. “But the auction never happened, and the judiciary never acted.”

Koraytem, who has been in charge of the port for 17 years, said that when he first heard the blast Tuesday, he figured it might be an air attack.

He had “no idea” what caused the initial fire at the storage facility that preceded the second, far larger blast, he said. Four of his employees died in the explosion. “This is not the time to blame,” he said. “We are living a national catastroph­e.”

On Friday, investigat­ors questioned and then ordered the detention of Koraytem, along with the country’s customs chief, Badri Daher, and Daher’s predecesso­r.

So far, at least 16 port employees have been detained and others questioned in connection with the blast.

Prokoshev, who said he is still owed $60,000 in wages, placed the fault with Grechushki­n, and with Lebanese officials, who insisted on first impounding the boat and then on keeping the ammonium nitrate in the port “instead of spreading it on their fields.”

“They could have had very good crops instead of a huge explosion,” he said.

As for the Rhosus, Prokoshev learned from friends who sailed to Beirut that it had sunk in the harbour in 2015 or 2016 after taking water on board, he said.

His only surprise on hearing this, he added, was that it had not gone down sooner.

 ?? MARWAN TAHTAH PHOTOS/GETTY IMAGES ?? The smoulderin­g ruins of Beirut’s port, where 2,750 tonnes of high-density ammonium nitrate was stored in a facility known as Hangar 12. According to public records posted to social media, customs officials wrote to Lebanese courts at least six times from 2014 to 2017, seeking guidance on how to dispose of the explosive material.
MARWAN TAHTAH PHOTOS/GETTY IMAGES The smoulderin­g ruins of Beirut’s port, where 2,750 tonnes of high-density ammonium nitrate was stored in a facility known as Hangar 12. According to public records posted to social media, customs officials wrote to Lebanese courts at least six times from 2014 to 2017, seeking guidance on how to dispose of the explosive material.
 ??  ?? Members of the army hold back demonstrat­ors in Beirut on Thursday. Lebanon had already been in the grips of an economic and political crisis, and many blame the government for mismanagem­ent that led to the devastatin­g blast.
Members of the army hold back demonstrat­ors in Beirut on Thursday. Lebanon had already been in the grips of an economic and political crisis, and many blame the government for mismanagem­ent that led to the devastatin­g blast.

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