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After Titanic-like terror, Viking Sky cruise ship reaches port, everyone safe

- John Bacon and Sara M. Moniuszko Contributi­ng: The Associated Press

A cruise ship stranded off Norway’s western coast reached port with its remaining passengers.

More than half of the Viking Sky ship’s 915 passengers were airlifted to safety before authoritie­s opted Sunday to allow the ship to limp into the nearby port of Molde with the aid of a towboat.

“All passengers and crew are safe, and passengers will be flying home starting tonight,” the cruise line said in a statement on its website Sunday. “Throughout all of this, our first priority was for the safety and well-being of our passengers and our crew. We would like to thank the Norwegian Redningsse­ntral and the Norwegian emergency services for their support and skill displayed in managing the situation in very challengin­g weather conditions.”

The cruise line’s next sailing, which had been set for Wednesday, was canceled.

Viking Sky issued a mayday Saturday after engine troubles and a harrowing encounter with rough waters and high winds off Norway’s western coast.

Carolyn Savikas of Pennsylvan­ia described the terror to Norway’s VG newspaper, saying she heard a “terrible crash,” and the ship rocked. Water raced in. “We were in the restaurant when a really huge wave came and shattered a door and flooded the entire restaurant,” she said. “All I saw were bones, arms, water and tables. It was like the Titanic – just like the pictures you have seen from the Titanic.”

Authoritie­s said the weather and sea conditions prevented rescue workers from using lifeboats or other vessels to evacuate the ship. Five helicopter­s shuttled passengers to shore.

The ship’s owner, Viking Ocean Cruises, said 20 people were injured, although some had been treated and released.

Some of the 479 passengers who were flown to shore were scheduled to begin flying home Sunday, the company said. An additional 436 passengers and the crew of 458 remained aboard while the ship headed toward port.

“Today was some of the worst (conditions) I have been involved with, but now it looks like it’s going well, and in the end, we have been lucky,” company chairman Torstein Hagen told Norway’s NRK television.

Norwegian media reported gusts up to 43 mph and waves higher than 26 feet. Passengers took to social media to share their experience­s as the rescue unfolded. Alexus Sheppard posted a video on Twitter of severe tilting because of the rough waters. “We’re waiting for evacuation by helicopter,” she wrote with the hashtags #VikingSky and #Mayday.

 ?? SVEIN OVE EKORNESVAG/AP ?? Passengers are helped from a rescue helicopter in Fraena, Norway, on Sunday after being rescued from the Viking Sky cruise ship.
SVEIN OVE EKORNESVAG/AP Passengers are helped from a rescue helicopter in Fraena, Norway, on Sunday after being rescued from the Viking Sky cruise ship.

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