See also: Maryam (disambiguation).
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, the ship is Lebanese-owned and operated as medical aid cargo ship which, in August 2010, was intended to sail to the Gaza Strip to break Israel's four-year blockade of Gaza.
The ship, built as Venture 84, is a Westamaran W95 catamaran.[4] [5] The Westamaran line was designed by Herald Heinriksen of Westermoen Hydrofoil of Mandal, Norway. Featuring asymmetrical hulls, the Westamaran models were designed as a replacement for hydrofoils, and were considered more seaworthy in Norwegian waters and easier to operate than hydrofoils.[5] The immediate predecessor of the W95, the W86, has been called a "breakthrough" for high-speed craft in Norway, and according to Bjørn Foss of More and Romsdal College, Westamaran catamarans "dominated the fast ferry market in Norway" for several years. Westmaran ships have seen use world-wide.[5]
The W95 has a maximum cruising speed of 28 knots, powered by two 1800 horsepower main engines that consume up to 625 litres of fuel per hour.[6]
Venture 84 entered service as a vessel of the French ferry operator Emeraude Lines in April 1983, and was renamed Trident.[5] While Emeraude Lines would go on to operate several W95 ferries, Trident had the distinction of being the only ship the company ever bought new from the builder.[5] The company's advertising mentioned the ship's "large air-conditioned passenger saloon with a panoramic view and bar".[5] Trident was used mainly for the route from Saint Malo to Saint Helier, on a 70-minute schedule with a daytrip fare of 195 French Francs.[5] In 1986, the ship was renamed Trident III, often written Trident 3.[5] The ship continued the Channel Islands-France service until 1996 when it was purchased by ferry operator Fergün Denizcilik of Kyrenia, Cyprus.[4] [5]
Renamed Fergün Express III, the ship joined a ferry service that had been operating since 1986.[4] In January 2008 the ship was withdrawn from its class at the Türk Loydu classification society for reasons including an overdue survey.[7] In August 2009, the ship was purchased by shipowner Ghassan El Assaad el Bakri of Tripoli, Lebanon and renamed Ladi Faten.[7] In August 2010, it was sold to "undisclosed interests", reflagged under the Cambodian flag of convenience, and renamed Jounieh Star. The ship has recently been registered under the Bolivian and Jordanian flags.
the ship is known as Mariam or St. Mariam. It is currently a Lebanese medical aid cargo ship which, in August 2010, was intended to sail to the Gaza Strip to break Israel's four-year blockade of Gaza. It sails under the Bolivian flag.[8] The ship carries 50 women, mostly from Lebanon, but also a group of American nuns.[9] Its actions are coordinated by Lebanese lawyer Samar al Hajj.[8] [10] According to The Guardian, the women on board have all adopted the ship's name and call themselves "Mariam."[11]
Its first mission, in late August 2010, was delayed because Cyprus would not allow it (and its sister ship the Naji Alali) to sail through its waters;[12] because Lebanon is still officially at war with Israel, the ship cannot go to Gaza directly from Lebanon and would have to sail through a third country.[13] Israeli Minister of Foreign Affairs Avigdor Lieberman was unequivocal in his insistence that the Mariam not reach Gaza: "Our position is absolutely clear and firm – under no conditions or provocations can any flotilla or ship harm our country's political independence and reach the Gaza Strip."[14]
, representatives of the Mariam voyage are in talks with Greece to use a Greek port for departure to Gaza.[15]