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Ship carrying 750 tons of fuel sinks off Tunisia’s coast, threatening environmental disaster

  • Tunisia’s Environment Ministry announced the activation of the national emergency response plan, put in place over the potential threat of maritime pollution
  • The crew of the Xelo oil tanker was saved by teams from the Maritime Guard and Civil Protection

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The merchant fuel ship which sank off the coast of Gabes in Tunisia on April 15 is seen in Rostov-on-Don, Russia in November 2017. Photo: Dmitry Frolov / Handout via Reuters
Associated Press

A commercial oil tanker carrying more than 750 tons of diesel ran aground overnight from Friday to Saturday in the Gulf of Gabès in southeastern Tunisia.

According to Tunisia’s Environment Ministry, the ship sank late on Saturday morning after water seeped into the engine room. Only the bow of the boat was still visible. It is unclear if it is leaking fuel.

As soon as the accident was announced on Friday night, the Environment Ministry announced the activation of the national emergency response plan, put in place over the potential threat of maritime pollution.

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That consists of experts, marine guard and civil protection agents being deployed to the danger zone, and buffers such as tarpaulin put around the perimeter to contain any leak.

The Xelo, which was flying the flag of Equatorial Guinea, had left the port of Damietta in Egypt heading for Malta, but was diverted from its route because of bad weather.

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The crew was saved by teams from the Maritime Guard and Civil Protection.

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