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The Queen-An tourist ship was raising its security in Kunard while walking through the waters of infiltration.
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The passengers were told to stay away from the platform one night, draw their veils and turn off their lights.
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Konard said it was a standard measure while traveling in some water.
The passengers of the Queen-An tourist ship were advised to take precautionary measures last week because the ship was 114,000 tons in a leaked area in Southeast Asia during global flights.
The 111-night trip, which began in January in Germany, last week, the ship was flying between Darwin, Australia and Manila in the Philippines, passing through the Sulu-Celebs Sea.
Before traveling to water, which the International Center for Counter-Terrorism once described as a “heat for crime, infiltration and terrorism,” the captain issued a warning to the plane.
In a video of the passenger’s loudspeaker, which has not seen the place, the captain warned the passengers that the ship was operating at a “high security level” while crossing an area known for the threat of maritime infiltration.
As part of these security measures, the passengers were told that the loudspeakers outside the beaches would be closed overnight, and only the open bulbs remained necessary to reduce the vision of the ship.
The passengers were also asked to turn off the lights of their states’ rooms when they were not needed and kept their curtains with them.
Queen Anne is the fourth luxury tour ship in Konard. It can accommodate 2,996 guests, 1,225 teams, thousands of pieces of art on the plane, as well as facilitating activities such as arrows, bows and picklebols.
The waters between Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines were once famous for kidnapping events for consent, especially by the Abu Sayaf group, an armed group and a jihadist navy.
Between late 2016 and mid-2022, the ships were advised to avoid the region, along with the Recaap Information Center, which pursues the infiltration of Asia in Asia, which is highly considering the dangers of kidnapping.
Since January 2020, no kidnapping incidents have been reported in the region, and the level of threats has fallen to low in January
While attacks on tourist ships are rare, they are not unheard. In 2009, the Somali Navy tried to ride the MSC melody near Seychell. The passengers threw tables and chairs on the ground before the pistol caused the retreat of the naval gangsters.
In general, naval gangsters target oil tankers and containers, not tourist ships. In addition, the spokesman said such measures are a standard measure in some areas.
“As part of the standard maritime measures, our captains may make a precautionary statement when they go through some areas,” the spokesman told Business Insider.
“There was no special threat to the ship and its guests and the experience on the plane remained uninterrupted,” they said.
Read the original article on business Insider