Two container ships collide off coast of China
One crew abandons their vessel after fire broke out on board

Two European-owned container ships have collided in the East China Sea and one severely damaged vessel has been abandoned by its crew after a fire broke out on board, the Denmark-based Maersk Line said on Monday.
Maersk said its ship, the Safmarine Meru, collided with the German-owned Northern Jasper off the eastern Chinese coast port of Ningbo while heading there from Qingdao further north.
It had fewer than 400 full containers on board when the collision took place early on Sunday about 120 nautical miles off the coast. The 22-strong crew quickly abandoned the ship, which is now afloat and anchored near the accident site.
Two dead and 17 fishermen missing in East China Sea vessel collision
“It is too early to comment on the circumstances surrounding the collision and fire,” Maersk Line said in a statement.
Maersk Line, a unit in conglomerate AP Moller-Maersk, is the world’s largest container shipping company with more than 600 vessels transporting everything from flat-screen TVs to sports wear.
Chinese state media also reported on Monday that the authorities were questioning the crew of a Maltese-flagged ship that collided with a Chinese fishing boat over the weekend, killing at least two sailors and leaving 17 others missing, Chinese state media reported on Monday.
The ship’s Greek captain and 19-member mostly Filipino crew said they were unaware they had collided with another craft in heavy fog early on Saturday morning, the reports quoted Xu Zhiyong, a border checkpoint officer in the port of Beilun in the eastern province of Zhejiang, as saying.