Homeward bound: Columbus heads back to Tilbury after passenger exchange at sea

By Neil Speight

19th Mar 2020 | Local News

A CRUISE ship is steaming back to Thurrock and its home port in Tilbury after a unique passenger transfer and repatriation operation involving 239 passengers.

The Columbus is the flagship of the borough-based cruise company Cruise & Maritime Voyages (CMV) and it made rendezvous 12 nautical miles off the coast of Phuket, Thailand with a sister ship, Vasco da Gama, which is also operated by the company.

The five and a half hour ship-to-ship passenger exchange by tender operation followed the recent CMV announcement that all cruise operations were being suspended and voyages curtailed with the CMV fleet returning to their home ports.

Despite representations and last-ditch mercy pleas to the Thai Authorities, the Port of Phuket remained closed to cruise ships along with all other ports in South East Asia and the wider Indian sub-continent rendering an air repatriation not an option. Permission had however been granted by the local Port Authorities to take on provisions and bunkers off the coast of Phuket before the ships' onward voyages.

Columbus was operating a four month Round the World cruise carrying 1,020 passengers before her voyage curtailment in Semarang (Indonesia) while Vasco da Gama was operating a Northbound voyage from Fremantle and Singapore via the Suez Canal to Tilbury carrying 839 passengers.

This unique repatriation operation was a huge logistical challenge for officers and crew involving the transfer of more than 500 pieces of luggage, 239 passengers and the transfer of provisions all undertaken by tender. The operation commenced at 6:30am and was completed by 12noon.

Christian Verhounig, Chief Executive at Cruise & Maritime Voyages said: "We are tremendously proud of our onboard and shoreside teams for their fantastic job in delivering this safe and effective evacuation and relief operation. On behalf of the directors, staff and especially our hard-working crew CMV would like to thank all our current passengers for their support, patience and understanding during this repatriation operation."

Columbus is now undertaking a 7,842 nautical mile voyage directly back to Thurrock with 907 passengers including 602 British nationals and 619 crew members onboard. The voyage includes a technical call in Colombo, Sri Lanka then via the Suez Canal with a final technical call before arriving back in Tilbury on 13 April.

Vasco da Gama is now undertaking a 2,837 nautical mile voyage directly back to Australia with 952 passengers including 907 Australian & New Zealander nationals and 552 crew members onboard arriving back in Fremantle (Perth) on 27 March.

CMV does not currently have any cases of the coronavirus Covid-19 onboard either ship but the company says stringent hygiene protocols remain in place on board Columbus and Vasco da Gama.

Port could house patients in isolation on cruise ships.

     

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