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Baltimore road bridge collapses after container ship collision

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A rescue operation was under way in the US port of Baltimore early on Tuesday after a container ship hit a road bridge which collapsed into the water.

Rescue officials said that efforts were focused on finding “upwards of seven individuals” who were on the bridge when it collapsed, with the fire department calling the incident a “mass-casualty event”.

Video footage showed the Francis Scott Key Bridge across the Patapsco river at the mouth of the port collapsing at about 1.30am local time. The bridge carries the Interstate 695 highway across the river.

Operations were being carried out “on the surface of the water, subsurface” and “on the deck of the ship itself”, said Baltimore fire department chief James Wallace in a news conference on Tuesday. He added that two people had been removed from the water and that several vehicles had been “detected”.

“This is an unthinkable tragedy,” said Baltimore mayor Brandon Scott at the same news conference.

Wes Moore, governor of Maryland, declared a state of emergency. “We are working with an inter-agency team to quickly deploy federal resources from the Biden administration,” his office wrote on the social media platform X.

Information on Marine Traffic, a vessel-tracking service, showed the container ship Dali, a Singapore-flagged vessel, at the site of the bridge surrounded by rescue tugs. It had just left Baltimore for the Sri Lankan port of Colombo and was using specialist pilots to navigate out of the port.

Vessel operator Synergy Marine Group said “all crew members, including the two pilots who were aboard, have been accounted for and there are no reports of any injuries”.

The 300-metre ship was operating a service for Denmark’s Maersk, the world’s second-biggest container shipping line, according to Marine Traffic. Maersk did not immediately respond to a request to comment.

Insurer databases showed the ship had liability insurance through Britannia, one of a global group of protection and indemnity insurers that share losses and are ultimately reinsured at Lloyd’s of London. Britannia declined to comment.

Baltimore is one of the busiest ports on the US east coast, serving a large metro area including Washington DC. Serious collisions between ships and civilian infrastructure are rare events, especially ones causing damage and injury.

The Francis Scott Key Bridge was opened to traffic in 1977 to ease Baltimore’s growing congestion, according to the website of Preservation Maryland, a non-profit heritage organisation. It was named after Francis Scott Key, the lawyer and poet who penned the US national anthem “The Star-Spangled Banner”. Key was inspired to write the words by the successful American defence of Baltimore against a British assault in 1814.

The accident comes after a cargo ship collided last month with a bridge in Guangzhou, southern China, killing five people.

Additional reporting by David Sheppard, Michael Peel and Ian Smith in London


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