Cruise ship mutiny: Stranded passengers rebel after three days of blackouts, food rations and broken toilets



It was meant to be a luxurious and relaxing break, with passengers enjoying stop-offs in Amsterdam, Stockholm, Helsinki, St Petersburg and Copenhagen.

But the ten-day cruise quickly turned into a nightmare for the 1,700 people on board – including 400 Britons – when their luxury liner broke down in the Baltic Sea.

Holidaymakers aboard the stricken MSC Opera staged a mutiny after enduring blackouts, food shortages and no running water or working toilets for almost three days.



Back on dry land: Passengers from the MSC Opera board a bus to take them to the airport to catch flights home

Stricken: Passengers on board the MSC Opera staged a mutiny after the liner broke down in the Baltic Sea, leaving no running water, food shortages and no working toilets

Mrs Birch, who was speaking to Isle of Wight Radio, added: ‘The captain we haven’t seen, there was a bit of a mutiny [on Sunday night], everybody shouting for the captain but he never appeared and then they decided to give us all free drink.

Her son Mark Birch, senior coxswain at the Sandown and Shanklin Inshore Lifeboat, who was not on board the ship, said passengers chanted: ‘We want the captain, we want the captain.’

He added: ‘He wouldn’t come down but they opened the bar to calm everyone down.’

Mr Birch said his mother had saved up for the cruise as she had always longed to visit St Petersburg. ‘They’ve been offered a free cruise but she’s a bit frightened of the sea and I imagine it will put her off for life.’



Jo Orchard from Exmouth, Devon, received a panicked telephone call from her parents Dennis and Linda Huntley, who took the trip to celebrate Mr Huntley turning 65.

No place like home: Passengers Noel and Jan Rampton were flown in to Bournemouth airport after being stranded at sea

Back on home turf: Sisters Catherine Jordine (left) and Joan Kennedy finally returned from the ordeal, which left passengers stuck on the ship in Baltic Sea

Mrs Orchard said: ‘For 24 hours, they were told nothing. They had no water, no electricity, no food, no sanitation. All they had to eat all day was a dry biscuit.

‘It was scary for them. They were just floating aimlessly in the dark.’ Their ordeal came to an end when tugs were sent out on Sunday to pull the vessel to shore.

It reached land yesterday and passengers were bussed to Stockholm and flown to Bournemouth last night.

An MSC Cruises spokesman said all passengers would receive a credit voucher for another ten-day cruise.

The company has cancelled the ship’s next excursion, due to sail out of Southampton today, which will affect around 500 passengers.