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ACCIDENT

Swedish coastguard aids blazing ferry

The Swedish coastguard came to the aid of a Danish ferry travelling from Oslo to Copenhagen on Wednesday after a fire broke out onboard.

Swedish coastguard aids blazing ferry

The fire on the vessel broke out early Wednesday on the ferry but was put out after two hours, the ferry’s owner and the Swedish sea rescue service said.

“The alarm went off around 6:00 am (0500 GMT). The fire started on the car deck and began either in a car or a trailer,” Stellan E-son Skeppargaard, who heads the sea rescue service in the southwestern Swedish towns of Höganäs and Mölle, told AFP.

Swedish firefighters were air-dropped onto the DFDS ferry, the Pearl of Scandinavia, by helicopter and had been considering evacuating the 490 passengers and 161 crew.

“The passengers were evacuated from their cabins to a muster station, but it was not necessary to evacuate anyone from the ship,” DFDS said in a statement.

“The fire has now been put out and there are no injuries,” it added.

The Swedish coastguard said in a statement it had sent two boats and a helicopter to help extinguish the flames, while the sea rescue service had sent two boats and Danish authorities one.

The ferry, carrying 190 cars and one coach, had stood off of Höganäs during the rescue effort but was now continuing its voyage to Copenhagen, Skeppargaard said.

A coastguard vessel was escorting it to the port.

DFDS spokesperson Gert Jakobsen also told the Danish Politiken daily’s online edition

around 0830 GMT that the ferry would soon dock in the Danish capital.

“When the ship docks, the passengers who need it will be offered crisis assistance. And we will of course also take care of our crew, who have been involved in the extinguishing work on the car deck,” he told the paper.

Last month, an explosion on another DFDS-owned ferry, the Lithuanian-flagged Lisco Gloria, travelling from Kiel in Germany to the Lithuanian port of Klaipeda, caused a fire that burned for more than 30 hours before it was put out.

The 249 people onboard that ferry were all evacuated, and some were treated for smoke inhalation but no one suffered serious injuries.

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FIRE

Situation ‘unstable’ at Copenhagen’s old stock exchange after fire

Three days after a fire which ravaged Copenhagen's historic former stock exchange broke out, emergency services said Friday that the situation was "unstable" due to equipment issues and a strong breeze.

Situation 'unstable' at Copenhagen's old stock exchange after fire

In the morning, during work to dismantle the scaffolding surrounding the building, a crane’s cutters came loose for as of yet unknown reasons.

It is currently wedged between the scaffolding — put up for the renovation of the historic building that was ongoing — and what remains of the walls.

“It is affecting our efforts”, Tim Ole Simonsen, leader of the operation at the rescue services, told a press conference.

Coupled with the wind picking up, the incident, which has temporarily halted work on dismantling the scaffolding, has made the situation “unstable”.

“The wind is blowing harder and harder, and there are tarps over the scaffolding that can catch the wind,” Simonsen said.

He added that this increases the risks, in particular of further collapse of the burnt-out facade which started collapsing late Thursday afternoon.

Located close to the Christiansborg parliament and seat of government, the Borsen building was commissioned by King Christian IV and built between 1619 and 1640. It was the stock exchange until the 1970s.

The fire began Tuesday morning under the copper roof of the building, which was undergoing renovations ahead of its 400th anniversary.

The cause of the blaze was unknown and Copenhagen police said Wednesday that a major investigation had been launched.

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