Burning Car Carrier Towed to Temporary Location off Dutch Coast 

This handout photograph taken on July 29, 2023 and released on July 30, 2023 by the Dutch coastguards, shows smoke rising from the Panamanian-registered car carrier ship Fremantle Highway, after a fire broke out late on July 25, 2023, killing one crew member, and prompting a massive effort to extinguish the flames. (Photo by Handout / Netherlands Coastguards / AFP)
This handout photograph taken on July 29, 2023 and released on July 30, 2023 by the Dutch coastguards, shows smoke rising from the Panamanian-registered car carrier ship Fremantle Highway, after a fire broke out late on July 25, 2023, killing one crew member, and prompting a massive effort to extinguish the flames. (Photo by Handout / Netherlands Coastguards / AFP)
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Burning Car Carrier Towed to Temporary Location off Dutch Coast 

This handout photograph taken on July 29, 2023 and released on July 30, 2023 by the Dutch coastguards, shows smoke rising from the Panamanian-registered car carrier ship Fremantle Highway, after a fire broke out late on July 25, 2023, killing one crew member, and prompting a massive effort to extinguish the flames. (Photo by Handout / Netherlands Coastguards / AFP)
This handout photograph taken on July 29, 2023 and released on July 30, 2023 by the Dutch coastguards, shows smoke rising from the Panamanian-registered car carrier ship Fremantle Highway, after a fire broke out late on July 25, 2023, killing one crew member, and prompting a massive effort to extinguish the flames. (Photo by Handout / Netherlands Coastguards / AFP)

A burning car carrier off the Dutch coast has been towed to a new location away from shipping lanes as part of an operation to salvage the ship, the Dutch public works and water management ministry and local media said on Monday.

The freighter, which was travelling from Germany to Egypt when the blaze broke out on July 26, was towed to a location north of the Dutch islands Ameland and Schiermonnikoog, the Rijkswaterstaat ministry said in a statement.

The fire on the Panamanian-registered Fremantle Highway, which was carrying new cars, resulted in the death of an Indian crew member and the injury of seven who jumped overboard to escape the flames. Japan's Shoei Kisen, which owns the ship, said the entire crew of 21 was Indian.

A Rijkswaterstaat spokeswoman told the Dutch ANP press agency that at the new temporary location, the ship would be further removed from shipping routes and more sheltered from wind.

The relocation is an intermediate step in the difficult salvage operation, the spokeswoman said.

Ship charter company "K" Line said on Friday there were 3,783 vehicles on board the ship - including 498 battery electric vehicles, significantly more than the 25 initially reported.

The company declined to say anything about the car brands, including whether they included any cars from Japanese manufacturers.

EV lithium-ion batteries burn with twice the energy of a normal fire, and maritime officials and insurers say the industry has not kept up with the risks.



Israel Intercepts Drones That Briefly Interrupted Airport Operations

People pass by a poster reading "Bring them home now" on a beach, in Tel Aviv, Israel, October 20, 2024. (Reuters)
People pass by a poster reading "Bring them home now" on a beach, in Tel Aviv, Israel, October 20, 2024. (Reuters)
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Israel Intercepts Drones That Briefly Interrupted Airport Operations

People pass by a poster reading "Bring them home now" on a beach, in Tel Aviv, Israel, October 20, 2024. (Reuters)
People pass by a poster reading "Bring them home now" on a beach, in Tel Aviv, Israel, October 20, 2024. (Reuters)

The Israeli military says it has intercepted five drones off the coast of Israel.

The incident on Monday caused a brief interruption of flights at Israel’s main airport lasting less than ten minutes, Israeli media reported.

The military said Israel’s air force has intercepted more than 30 drones over the past week.

Israel’s military has at times struggled to intercept drones, which are smaller, fly more erratically and are harder to track and intercept.

Last week, a Hezbollah drone attack on an army base in central Israel killed four soldiers and wounded 67 others, the deadliest strike by the armed group since Israel launched its ground invasion of Lebanon three weeks ago.

In July, a drone launched from Yemen traveled some 270 kilometers (160 miles) from Israel’s southern tip, all the way to Tel Aviv, slamming into a downtown building and killing one person without it having been intercepted.

Overnight Israeli strikes hit Hezbollah-run bank branches Overnight strikes by Israel hit at least 15 branches of a Hezbollah-run financial institution in Lebanon.

The strikes targeted Al-Qard Al-Hassan branches in the southern suburbs of Beirut, across southern Lebanon and in the eastern Bekaa Valley, where Hezbollah has a strong presence.

Israel says the bank is used to fund attacks. But it is also where many ordinary Lebanese keep their savings.

The Israeli military issued evacuation warnings ahead of the strikes. There were no reports of casualties.

One of the strikes in the Beirut suburbs was not far from the Lebanese General Security building. Another rocket landed on a road near Lebanon's only international airport.