On 11 September 2016,
Viking Freya collided with a bridge near to
Erlangen, Germany, crushing the wheelhouse; two crew members died. On 23 March 2019,
Viking Sky put out a mayday call after she suffered an engine failure in the
Hustadvika Channel, off the coast of Norway. Six of Norway's fourteen rescue helicopters were sent to the scene, and 460 passengers were evacuated before the ship reached
Molde under her own power. The vessel was attached to a tugboat as the anchors were inoperable. On 27 March 2019,
Viking Sky arrived at a shipyard in
Kristiansund for repairs. The next scheduled cruise was cancelled. On 1 April 2019,
Viking Idun collided with the oil tanker
Chemical Marketer (IMO 9304291) in
Terneuzen, in the Netherlands, not far from
Antwerp. Five passengers were slightly injured; one crew member was taken to a hospital. The Marine Insurance report indicates that the
Idun "suffered considerable damage to her bow" while the tanker "suffered several breaches to her hull". On 29 May 2019,
Viking Sigyn, during a sightseeing tour on the
Danube, collided with a small tour boat, the
Hableány, in
Budapest, Hungary.
Hableány sank with 35 people on board of whom 28 died. On 11 June 2019, the boat was recovered from the riverbed and deposited on a barge by a
floating crane. The captain of the
Viking Sigyn, identified as Yuriy C. and later as Yuriy Chaplinsky from
Odesa, Ukraine, was arrested and held in custody on suspicion of endangering water transport and causing a
mass-casualty incident. He was released on bail on 11 June 2019. According to Viking Cruises, Chaplinsky was also aboard the
Viking Idun at the time of 1 April 2019 incident but was not acting as captain of that vessel at the time it collided with the oil tanker. Other reports stated that, according to Hungarian prosecutors he was, in fact, the captain of the
Idun during the incident near Terneuzen. The Dutch Safety Board would not reveal the identity of captain of the ship during 1 April incident to the news media. A report from Hungary in mid October stated that the captain of the Sigyn, Yuriy Chaplinsky, was not impaired at the time of the crash and was on the bridge in control of the vessel. The Captain had stated that he "simply did not notice" the tour boat. Although news reports stated that he was not to "blame" for the crash, Captain Chaplinsky remained under pre-trial arrest as a suspect in "endangering water transport resulting in a fatal mass catastrophe and of failing to offer aid at the time of the crash", according to
CBS News. On the evening of 5 June 2019, a Viking ship, initially said to be the
Viking Var, damaged the lock of
Riedenburg, in the
Rhine–Main–Danube Canal. After the impact, the lock could not be properly closed. No one was injured in the accident. The repair was expected to take two to three weeks to complete. Witnesses later indicated the vessel involved in that incident was actually
Viking Tir. On 29 November 2022, the
Viking Polaris was hit by a
rogue wave during a storm off the coast of Argentina. A glass screen was shattered and a female passenger died from flying glass. Four other people were injured. On 18 August 2023, a crew member on
Viking Mars died after falling overboard in the port of
Cromarty Firth in
Invergordon. ==See also==