
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent, Worthy News
NEW DELHI (Worthy News) – The Indian Coast Guard was frantically searching for missing crew members after an explosion and subsequent fire were reported onboard a Singapore-flagged container ship off the coast of Kerala in southern India.
Commandant Amit Uniyal said in a statement monitored by Worthy News that of the 22 crew members onboard the MV Wan Hai 503, 18 abandoned the vessel Monday with assistance from the Indian Navy and Coast Guard, while four are missing.
One of the rescued crew members reportedly sustained serious injuries. Uniyal said that two of the four missing are nationals of Taiwan, one from Indonesia, and one from Myanmar.
Soon after, the navy and coast guard launched a search operation for the missing, aided by a Dornier aircraft.
Experts say the navy uses Dornier aircraft primarily for maritime surveillance and search and rescue operations.
Officials confirmed that several ships were also sent to help put out the fire 88 nautical miles (163 kilometers) from the coast of Beypore in Kerala.
“The vessel is presently adrift, and firefighting efforts have commenced to bring the situation under control,” said Unival. “Saving the lives of the crew in distress, firefighting, and mitigating environmental hazards remains the priority for the Coast Guard.”
RISKS INVESTIGATED
He said they were working to establish the details of the ship’s cargo and any potential risks it could cause.
The 890-foot (271 meters) vessel reportedly left the Sri Lankan port of Colombo on June 7 and was set to arrive in Mumbai, India, on Monday.
The Coast Guard received a distress alert from the ship Monday morning reporting “an explosion” and a subsequent fire inside one of the containers onboard. The fire later spread to other containers, according to authorities
The Coast Guard has not yet given the cause of the explosion and fire. The vessel is managed by Singapore-based Wan Hai Lines, according to a statement from Singaporean authorities.
Late last month, a Liberia-flagged MSC ELSA 3 container ship sailing between the Indian ports of Vizhinjam and Kochi sank about 38 nautical miles (70 kilometers) off Kerala state.
All 24 crew members were rescued, India’s defense ministry said at the time.
However, Kerala’s government issued a high alert in its coastal areas and asked fishermen not to venture near the site where the container ship, which carried hazardous cargo, had sunk. It underscored broader concerns about maritime safety in the busy shipping region.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
A Christian pastor detained in Nicaragua since July 2025 has been released from prison but placed under house arrest along with five other Christian believers, Worthy News established on Thursday.
An injured Christian pastor in eastern India says recalling Bible verses gave him strength to survive hours of brutal abuse by a Hindu mob that accused him of converting Hindus to Christianity.
U.S. forces carried out five sets of precision strikes against Islamic State targets across Syria between Jan. 27 and Feb. 2, the U.S. military’s U.S. Central Command announced Wednesday.
U.S. forces carried out five sets of precision strikes against Islamic State targets across Syria between Jan. 27 and Feb. 2, the U.S. military’s U.S. Central Command announced Wednesday.
U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff announced on Feb. 5 that Ukraine and Russia have agreed to exchange 314 prisoners, marking the first such swap in five months and the most tangible outcome yet from U.S.-brokered talks held in Abu Dhabi. The exchange followed multiple days of trilateral negotiations involving delegations from Washington, Kyiv, and Moscow.
The Supreme Court of the United States on Wednesday declined to take up a legal challenge to California’s newly drawn congressional map, allowing the state to proceed with district lines that effectively eliminate five Republican-held U.S. House seats.
President Donald Trump said Thursday that Iran has entered negotiations with the United States because it fears potential military action, as both sides prepare for high-stakes talks expected to take place in Oman. Speaking at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, Trump said Tehran “doesn’t want us to hit them,” adding that a U.S. naval fleet is in the region as pressure increases.