A ghost ship carrying nothing but disease-ridden rats could be about to make land on Britain’s shore, experts have warned. 
The Lyubov Orlova cruise liner has been drifting across the north  Atlantic for the better part of a year, and salvage hunters say there is  a strong chance it is heading this way.
Built in Yugoslavia in  1976, the unlucky vessel was abandoned in a Canadian harbour after its  owners were embroiled in a debt scandal and failed to pay the crew.
The  authorities in Newfoundland tried to sell the hull for scrap – valued  at £600,000 – to the Dominican Republic, but cut their losses when it  came loose in a storm on the way.
Sending the ship off into  international waters, Transport Canada said it was satisfied the Lyubov  Orlova “no longer poses a threat to the safety of [Canadian] offshore  oil installations, their personnel or the marine environment”.
Experts  say the ship, which is likely to still contain hundreds of rats that  have been eating each other to survive, must still be out there  somewhere because not all of its lifeboat emergency beacons have been  set off.
READ MORE: UK Independent
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Ghost ship full of cannibal rats ‘could be heading for Britain', not a new horror movie
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
