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What Will happen to Chief Officer of Iraqi ship accused of damaging undersea internet cables?
Current forecast: Charges dropped, and freed upon any damages being paid. (49% chance
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Combining all predictions, the current most likely outcome is Charges dropped, and freed upon any damages being paid. with a probability of 49% (unchanged in last 1 day)
United Arab Emirates has impounded two ships accused of damaging undersea internet cables earlier in 2008. The Korean vessel has been released after $60,000 in damages were paid. The Iraqi Captain of the Iraqi vessel was not on board when seized by U.A.E. Coast guard. The Indian Chief Officer has been arrested and $350,000 in damages is being sought as the ship remains impounded.
Settlement details:
As reported by a major mainstream news source.
Make your prediction!
| Charges dropped, and freed upon any damages being paid. |
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| Conviction of any crime by UAE. |
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| Released to, and held by, any agency or government foreign to UAE. |
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Activity: H$2,240
Open question (no suspend date)
Suspend date: None
Initial likelihoods: Charges dropped, and freed upon any damages being paid.: 50%, Conviction of any crime by UAE.: 30%, Released to, and held by, any agency or government foreign to UAE.: 20%
Action history:
Suspend date: None
more info...
Predictions (16)
16 predictions
32 weeks ago
38 weeks ago
38 weeks ago
Comments (8)
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This news is selected automatically based on the question, its background, options and tags
This news is selected automatically based on the question, its background, options and tags
score: 10
MENAFN 3 weeks ago
the International Association of Ports and Harbours, the Nautical Institute, the Royal Institute of Naval Architects, ImarEST, the UAE Ship Owners Association and the Supply Chain & Logistics Group
score: 10
MENAFN 3 weeks ago
the International Association of Ports and Harbours, the Nautical Institute, the Royal Institute of Naval Architects, ImarEST, the UAE Ship Owners Association and the Supply Chain & Logistics Group
score: 10
MENAFN 6 weeks ago
International Association of Ports and Harbours, the Nautical Institute, the Royal Institute of Naval Architects, ImarEST, and the UAE Ship Owners Association
score: 10
Business Intelligence Middle East 10 weeks ago
International Association of Ports and Harbours, the Nautical Institute, the Royal Institute of Naval Architects, ImarEST, and the UAE Ship Owners Association. For more details visit www.seatrade-middleeast.com
score: 10
AME Info 12 weeks ago
International Association of Ports and Harbours, the Nautical Institute, the Royal Institute of Naval Architects, ImarEST, and the UAE Ship Owners Association.
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yikes.
There's no available record of the MV Hounslow or who it's owner is. There's no news or update on the cable owner's corporate site either.
To the best of my abilities, (I'm no sailor but I used the reported size of the anchor to determine rough size of the ship) here's a picture of a ship around the same size (http://www.shipphotos.co.uk/pages/mscariane.htm). Now, why was a ship of this size sailing into the Dubai gulf with only two crew members, and no captain, on board?
I'm doubting a conspiracy but I do believe this story is supposed to be dead.
With no settlement date, I'm interested to follow up on this one in a month or two and see if anything pops up.
One thing I found is this article: http://www.gsm-3gworldseries.com/newt/l/gsm/article_view.html?artid=20017523798 It contradicts articles as to which ship is Korean and which is Iraqi.
I am not sure if the ship in question is the MV Hounslow or the MV Ann.
This question may prove difficult to settle but I hope it can remain open. These ships are pretty big, they should pop up somewhere eventually. As to the status of the officer of the Iraqi ship; hopefully time will tell.
Indian chief officer, Shifam Kablash, and a Syrian chief engineer, Osman Abdul Gadir
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