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NewsMarch 26, 2019

COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- Norwegian officials have opened an investigation into why a cruise ship carrying more than 1,370 people set sail along the country's often wild western coast despite storm warnings, forcing a major evacuation by helicopter. One person is in critical but stable condition in an intensive care ward, hospital officials said, adding eight others were still hospitalized after the weekend ordeal...

Associated Press
Passengers rescued from the Viking Sky cruise ship are helped from a helicopter Saturday in Hustadvika, Norway. A cruise ship with engine problems sent a mayday call off Norway's western coast, then began evacuating its 1,300 passengers and crew amid stormy seas and heavy winds.
Passengers rescued from the Viking Sky cruise ship are helped from a helicopter Saturday in Hustadvika, Norway. A cruise ship with engine problems sent a mayday call off Norway's western coast, then began evacuating its 1,300 passengers and crew amid stormy seas and heavy winds.Associated Press

COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- Norwegian officials have opened an investigation into why a cruise ship carrying more than 1,370 people set sail along the country's often wild western coast despite storm warnings, forcing a major evacuation by helicopter.

One person is in critical but stable condition in an intensive care ward, hospital officials said, adding eight others were still hospitalized after the weekend ordeal.

The Viking Sky had left the northern city of Tromsoe and was headed for Stavanger in southern Norway when it had engine problems and issued a mayday call Saturday afternoon.

The ship anchored in heavy seas to avoid being dashed on the rocks in an area known for shipwrecks. Norwegian authorities then launched a daring rescue operation despite the high winds, eventually winching 479 passengers off the ship by helicopter in an operation going on for hours Saturday night and into Sunday morning.

Dag S. Liseth of Norway's Accident Investigations Board said "the high risk which the ship, its passengers and crew were exposed to made us decide to investigate the incident."

After about half of the ship's passengers were taken off, the captain made the decision mid-day Sunday to halt the evacuation. About 900 people were still on board when the ship limped into the port city of Molde on its own engines.

Viking Ocean Cruises said Monday it had begun "an internal investigation .... to establish a complete and thorough understanding of what happened," and welcome the official investigations which they "will fully support."

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In the same statement, Viking Ocean Cruises chairman Torstein Hagen also said he "would like to personally apologize for what our guests experienced."

Liseth said investigators were heading to Molde on Monday and declined to speculate why the Viking Sky captain had decided to sail to Stavanger in the first place despite the weather warning. He couldn't immediately say how long the cruise ship would remain in Molde.

Yngve Skovly, of the police force in Moere and Romsdal district, where Molde sits, said there is no suspicion of a criminal offense but police have opened an investigation to find out why the ship had engine problems.

That probe would be part of the one by the Accident Investigations Board.

The Viking Sky is a relatively new ship, delivered in 2017 to operator Viking Ocean Cruises.

The ship was on a 12-day cruise along Norway's coast before its scheduled arrival Tuesday in the British port of Tilbury, on the River Thames. The passengers were mostly an English-speaking mix of American, British, Canadian, New Zealand and Australian citizens.

All the cruise ship passengers were expected to be flown out of Norway by Monday evening, police said.

Viking Sky's next trip, to Scandinavia and Germany, which was to leave Wednesday, has been canceled, but its owner said no other trip cancellations for the ship were foreseen yet.

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