Abandoned
cruise ship filled with cannibal rats headed for British shore
The
Lyubov Orlova has been detected off the coast of Scotland. Its only
passengers are demented, disease-ridden rats feeding off each other.
23
January, 2014
An
abandoned cruise liner teeming with inbred cannibal rats is adrift in
the Atlantic Ocean and possibly about to run aground on Britain’s
coastline, according to a new report.
The
Lyubov Orlova has been drifting east from Canadian waters since last
year.
Newly
detected beacons off the dilapidated vessel’s rescue boats indicate
it is was recently off the west coast of Scotland, raising concerns
it could run ashore there, along the west coast of Ireland or the
southern tip of England, according to The Sun.
Salvage
hunters are keen to find the dilapidated 300-foot ghost ship that can
carry 110 passengers because it is estimated to be worth nearly $1
million.
But
once aboard, the scrappers will face unimaginable horror: a demented,
disease-ridden population of rats that have been feeding on each
other and breeding.
"There
will be a lot of rats, and they eat each other,” Belgian-based
salvage hunter Pim de Rhoodes told the tabloid. “If I get aboard,
I'll have to lace everywhere with poison."
The
ship was built in 1976 and primarily toured Antarctic waters. It was
abandoned in a Canadian harbor in Sept. 2010 by its indebted owners.
In
January of last year it was sold to the Dominican Republic for scrap,
but the tow line broke while en route. After harnessing the ship
again, the Canadian government elected to cut it loose in
international waters, saying it posed no threat to other vessels or
offshore oil drilling platforms.
But
the Irish coast guard chief Chris Reynolds said the danger is real.
“There
have been huge storms in recent months, but it takes a lot to sink a
vessel as big as that,” he told The Sun. “We must stay vigilant.”
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