The Story of the Moby Prince | A Short Documentary | Fascinating Horror

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On the 10th of April, 1991, the Moby Prince  - an Italian passenger ferry - collided   with another ship, resulting in an oil  fire on the deck of the Moby Prince.   The crew promptly radioed for help and herded  passengers to a fireproofed room within the ship.   The Moby Prince was mere minutes  from a Port Authority base,   and the fire was spreading relatively slowly.  It seemed all but certain that they would be   rescued in plenty of time... and yet as  the minutes ticked by, help never came. The fire on board the Moby Prince would turn  out to be one of the worst maritime disasters in   Italian history, in part because of a few tiny  human errors and one tragic miscommunication.   The Moby Prince was built in 1967 in an  English shipyard near Liverpool, and was   originally operated by a dutch company, sailing  the route between Harwich and Hook of Holland.   In 1984 the vessel was sold to NAVARMA,  an Italian shipping company that operated   numerous routes between the mainlands  and islands of France and Italy. On the day of the disaster the Moby  Prince was sailing a route between   Livorno (a destination popularly known  by English-speakers as "Leghorn") and   Olbia in Sardinia - a journey that would normally  take just under seven hours. Visibility was clear   and the seas were calm as 75 passengers boarded  the vessel, joining 66 crew already in place.   Given that the ferry had a maximum capacity of  1,200 persons it was a relatively quiet service. At 22:03 the Moby Prince departed. Nothing seemed  to miss as it took its usual route out of the   harbour at Livorno. However, before it could  get fully clear of the harbour it collided with   another ship that was sitting at anchor. The Agip  Abruzzo was a tanker ship loaded with thousands   of tons of crude oil. The Moby Prince's prow  sliced directly through its number seven tank,   spraying a huge quantity of oil  onto both boats and into the water. The two craft were briefly stuck together  by the collision. The captain of the Agip   Abruzzo was able to maneuver in such a way as  to unstick them, although doing so caused even   more oil to be ejected from the damaged tank.  While the crew of the Agip Abruzzo managed to   maintain control after the collision, the  crew of the Moby Prince were not so lucky.   The oil which had sprayed onto their ship had  almost immediately caught fire, creating a   blazing inferno on the prow. The crew were forced  to flee the control room - indeed they had to do   so with such haste that there was not time even to  cut power to the engines. Thus, blazing fiercely,   the Moby Prince remained in motion, spiraling  slowly away from the sight of the collision. With the crew forced out of the control room by  the blaze the situation on board the passenger   ferry was chaotic. The fire soon spread across  most of the deck, making evacuation into life   rafts an impossible task. Instead crew members  mustered passengers in the De Luxe Hall in the   interior of the ship. This was a room specially  constructed with fireproof doors and walls. Meanwhile the radio operator was making repeated  calls for help. Of course he could not reach the   fixed radio set in the control room, and so  was broadcasting using a portable transmitter. "Mayday. Mayday," he called. "Moby Prince.  Moby Prince. We are in a collision.   We are on fire. Firemen needed." And  then, more plaintively, he continued,   "Mate, if you do not help us  we will burn. Mayday. Mayday." As the fire consumed the ship the De Luxe  Hall remained unaffected. Temperatures were   initially tolerable even as waves of fire  ate through the surrounding structure.   The crew and passengers waited. They had barely  left the harbour. Help was only minutes away. They   could not escape their situation by themselves,  but it seemed certain that rescue would come. What the passengers and crew on  board the Moby Prince did not realize   was that a terrible failure in communications  was, at that very moment, taking place. Rescuers had indeed been mobilized from the  mainland... but they were attending to the Agip   Abruzzo. The tanker was now ablaze, and intense  efforts were being made to extinguish the flames.   Nobody was looking for the stricken Moby Prince,  as the captain of the Agip Abruzzo had mistakenly   reported that the collision had been with a small  tugboat and not with a large passenger ferry. To those on scene, extinguishing the fire and  rescuing the approximately 30 crew on board the   Agip Abruzzo took priority over looking for  the other vessel involved in the collision,   which they believed to be a small  tugboat with only a few crew on board. Authorities might have been alerted by  the mayday call from the Moby Prince,   but the transmission was weak and  thready. If they heard it at all they   may have misunderstood the garbled message  as a report of the burning Agip Abruzzo.   The end result of these failures of communication  is that nobody was looking for the Moby Prince.   Nobody realized that there were souls on  board who urgently needed rescue. Indeed   it wasn't until an hour had passed that the  burned hulk of the Moby Prince was discovered.   The tugboat which located it also rescued the  only survivor of the disaster, Alessio Bertrand,   a ship's boy who had thrown himself from the  stern of the ship when the fire first broke out. Finally realizing that another large craft was in  need of assistance, firefighting boats converged   on the Moby Prince. The flames were extinguished  and fire hoses were used to cool the hull   as quickly as possible. Eventually a lone rescuer  was able to board and attach a tow line. By the   time any meaningful rescue could be affected the  morning of the following day had almost dawned. By this time there was nobody left alive to save.  It was discovered that all 140 people on board   were deceased... but they hadn't been killed by  the flames. Instead they had suffocated to death.   It was discovered that as the crew of the Moby  Prince fled the control room there had not been   time to switch off the air conditioning system. As  the ship burned this system had circulated carbon   monoxide and other poisonous gases into the De  Luxe Hall, suffocating those who sheltered there. While the vast majority of victims were found  in the fireproof hall, some bodies were seen on   the deck itself. Despite the devastation around  them they too were unburned. It was speculated   that they had survived the choking fumes in the De  Luxe Hall and subsequently attempted to escape...   only to be overwhelmed by the heat radiating  from the hull as they tried to cross the deck. A videotape found in the ruins of the De Luxe  Hall confirmed suspicions that for almost an hour   the heat and fumes within the shelter had  been tolerable. If the radio operators call   for help had been heard, if the Moby Prince  had been found, if rescue had been swifter,   there is every chance that the majority  of those on board would have lived. In the aftermath of the disaster  an investigation was launched.   It was a complex one, with few clear conclusions. Poor visibility caused by localized fog  was said to be a contributing factor in   the initial collision... but some qualified  witnesses disagreed with this assessment,   stating that visibility on the night was clear. Likewise the Agip Abruzzo might have been  anchored in a zone where it should not have   been anchored... but conflicting reports prevented  a conclusion from being reached on this point. A rumor that the crew of the Moby Prince had been  distracted by the broadcast of a football match   appeared in newspapers... but  this notion was discredited   following questioning of the lone survivor. It was noted that military ships might have  been maneuvering in the area at the time of the   collision, with some believing that covert ship  movements might have caused the moby prince to go   off course and collide with the tanker. Again,  however, this could not be concretely proven. With this multitude of uncertainties, apportioning  responsibility for the tragedy was almost   impossible. Several individuals were charged,  including crew members from the Agip Abruzzo,   and members of the Port Authority...  but ultimately all charges were dropped,   or the people accused were absolved of any  wrongdoing. To this day the tragedy still   looms large in the public consciousness, with many  feeling that questions have been left unanswered   and those responsible have gotten  away without proper punishment. While the exact truth of every aspect of the Moby  Prince disaster may never be known, one thing is   certain: this was a disaster wherein several small  errors had catastrophic consequences. A missed   mayday call, a collision incorrectly reported,  rescue efforts focused on the wrong vessel.   Were it not for any of these mistakes things  might have ended very differently. The destruction   of the Moby Prince was a disaster that came  heartbreakingly close to being averted altogether.
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Channel: Fascinating Horror
Views: 1,776,763
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: ASMR, ASMR Horror, Horror, True Horror, Horror Story, Horror Stories, Horror Storytelling, Storytelling, Seconds From Disaster, Strange But True, Unsolved Mystery, Ride Accident, Theme Park Accident, Worst Accidents, Creepy, Creepypasta, True Creepypasta, Creepypasta Stories, I Survived, History, Documentary, Disaster Documentary, True Story, Moby Prince, Agip Abruzzo, Shipping, Boats, Boat Accident, Ship Accident, Ship Collision, Cruise Ship Crash, Italy, Italian History, Livorno
Id: QfhpNe6pOqU
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Length: 12min 15sec (735 seconds)
Published: Tue Dec 22 2020
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