Posts by: James R Hart

CIVIL WAR IN SIERRA LEONE – BLOOD DIAMONDS

CIVIL WAR IN SIERRA LEONE – BLOOD DIAMONDS

I’m not sure what emotions we felt as a ship’s crew – fear or apprehension, perhaps.
For as the ship sailed into the heat and humidity of Freetown harbour, the rows of military Land Rovers parked on the quay – some painted with a distinctive Red Cross – were plain to see.

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STOWAWAYS.

STOWAWAYS.

As defined by ‘Marine Insight’, the maritime educational body, stowaways are categorised in two groups:

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LIVERPOOL TO CAPE HATTERAS

LIVERPOOL TO CAPE HATTERAS

As the ship passed the Cape Hatteras lighthouse off North Carolina it was the deck cadet who spoke first: ” I’ve been here before”, he proclaimed.No-one answered until the lighthouse beam flashed, casting an eerie shadow inside the wheelhouse.”Yes, me also” replied the skipper

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Reina del Mar

Reina del Mar

Around the time when the United Kingdom had almost full-employment and a social contract to govern prices and wage restraint, we also had a thriving Merchant Navy. For this was in 1974 when not only were there over 1600 red-ensigned vessels compared to less than 300 today. That notwithstanding, the slump in vessels was already declining in that year owing to the oil-price…

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The ‘Tanker War’ – 1987

The ‘Tanker War’ – 1987

The first time I saw the circling speedboats from a distance of three nautical miles, I realised a ship was under attack. For this was the Gulf ‘tanker war’, part of a lesser- known conflict precedingthe 1990 Gulf War. At this time the Iraq-Iran conflict had been raging since 1980, it’s territorial losses and gains changed monthly. This stalemate prompted attacks on ships by both belligerents,…

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