News

The MV Ruby has meandered around Europe’s northwestern coastline under a cloud of suspicion over its thousands of tons of Russian fertilizer. By Lynsey Chutel Reporting from London The MV Ruby ...
But it’s not just the MV Ruby’s load of 20,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate that’s giving port officials pause — even though a far smaller load of the same fertilizer component devastated ...
MV Ruby is a 600-foot ship flying the flag of Malta, but it is owned by a Lebanese company controlled by Syrians and transports cargo from Russia. In the Russian port of Kandalaksha in the ...
The MV Ruby had originally loaded its ammonium nitrate cargo from Russia's northern town of Kandalaksha in late August and was headed to Las Palmas in the Canary Islands when it suffered damage ...
The Maltese-registered Ruby is carrying 20,000 tonnes of the chemical ... after being confiscated from a Russian-owned ship the MV Rhosus in 2013. Seven years later a massive explosion ripped ...
Locals in Great Yarmouth have been left gobsmacked by the "concerning" news following the arrival of the MV Ruby which has already been turned away from Norway and Lithuania. Beachgoers have ...
"On behalf of the people of Yarmouth, we urge the government to halt the return of the MV Ruby." A spokesperson for the Department for Transport told BBC News: "The port and vessel operator have ...
The MV Ruby has had to dump 300 hundred tonnes of its load into the North Sea, prompting an outcry. What is the MV Ruby doing? The ship left the port of Kandalaksha in northern Russia in July ...
A damaged cargo ship carrying 20,000 tonnes of 'potentially explosive' ammonium nitrate docked at Great Yarmouth without knowing that 300 tonnes of its load was already contaminated by seawater.
Rupert Lowe believes the decision to jettison the cargo from a damaged ship, the MV Ruby, was an overreaction and has caused serious ecological harm and threatened the local fishing industry.
The MV Ruby, which was refused entry into the Baltic Sea by Danish authorities earlier this week, has travelled south and is now just a few miles from the English coast and the Thames Estuary.
But it’s not just the MV Ruby’s load of 20,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate that’s giving port officials pause — even though a far smaller load of the same fertilizer component devastated ...