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MV X-Press Pearl may take months to salvage amid monsoon: Sri Lanka

MV X-Press Pearl may take months to salvage amid monsoon: Sri Lanka

THE SINKING fire-damaged container ship MV X-Press Pearl could take months to salvage because of rough monsoon seas, Sri Lanka said on Tuesday (15), as authorities investigated whether the deaths of dozens of turtles and dolphins were caused by the disaster.

Part of the Singapore-registered vessel submerged in early June after catching fire and burning for almost two weeks off the island nation's coast, releasing tons of plastic raw materials that swamped local beaches.


Coast conservation minister Nalaka Godahewa said he wanted the vessel removed so it would not pose a further pollution risk.

"We want the wreck removed, but salvors can't start their work in current conditions," Godahewa told reporters in the capital Colombo.

The monsoon season started this month and usually ends in September.

The salvors believe the ship's fuel oil burnt out during the blaze, but Godahewa said the authorities remained on standby for potential leaks.

The island's wildlife authorities are also investigating the deaths of several turtles and dolphins after dozens of carcasses washed ashore over the past few weeks.

Godahewa said autopsies were being conducted to determine if they died due to pollution from the ship.

The probe came ahead of the arrival of three United Nations Environment Programme experts on Wednesday (16) to help the south Asian nation estimate the damage caused by the incident.

The vessel was known to be carrying 81 containers of hazardous chemicals, including 25 tons of nitric acid, when it caught fire.

Sri Lanka is seeking $40 million (£28 m) in damages from the ship's operators X-Press Feeders for what officials have described as the "worst marine disaster" in the country's history.

Environmentalists are suing the government and X-Press Feeders for allegedly failing to prevent the disaster, while Sri Lankan police have also launched a criminal probe against the ship's captain, chief engineer and chief officer.

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