Freedom Ship
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Freedom Ship: Could this giant ‘floating city’ become the world's biggest cruise ship?
The proposed Freedom Ship would be unlike anything currently sailing the seas. Designed as a permanent floating city for up to 80,000 people, the mile-long vessel would feature homes, schools, hotels, parks, a hospital and even a sports stadium as it slowly circles the globe. Cruise ships have been getting bigger for decades, but a proposed new vessel would make today’s floating giants look surprisingly small.
World's biggest cruise ship costing £12bn will be a mile long and house 80,000 people
World's biggest cruise ship costing £12bn will be a mile long and house 80,000 people Over four times as long as its nearest rival, the planned 'Freedom Ship' will sail the seven seas as an independent city-state operating outside the jurisdiction of any single nation Royal Caribbean International’s twin cruise liners, Star of the Seas and Icon of the Seas, share the title of the world’s largest cruise ship. At almost a quarter of a mile in length, and with capacity for some 5,600 passengers...
Trump plans to reopen Strait of Hormuz
The US is set to deploy navy destroyers, aircraft and troops in an operation to guide stranded ships through the Strait of Hormuz from Monday. President Trump called "Project Freedom" a humanitarian gesture, but Iran has warned that any US interference would be considered a violation of the ceasefire. Meanwhile, human rights groups have accused the authorities inside Iran of carrying out widespread arrests, torture and executions - we hear from Iranians who say they’re living in fear.
Hundreds of ships cross the Strait of Hormuz, some are going 'dark' to do it
US and Iran negotiations in 'deadlock', but ships are finding ways to cross the Strait of Hormuz Tue 9 Jun 2026 at 4:56am Marine traffic observers have revealed hundreds of commercial ships have crossed out of the Strait of Hormuz, often by taking "dark" journeys through Iran's "tollbooth route" or with the guidance of the United States. Analysts also say some Iranian tankers are likely slipping past the US blockade in the opposite direction and entering Iranian waters to be used to store...
US’ 250th anniversary celebrations will put its decline on display
US’ 250th anniversary celebrations will put its decline on display US President Donald Trump’s plans for the country’s 250th anniversary don’t seem to project what makes the American experiment worth honouring There is a long tradition of reading a nation’s character in the way it marks its own milestones. When the United States turned 150, Philadelphia raised an 80-foot-tall luminous replica of the Liberty Bell and hosted a six-month Sesquicentennial International Exposition. When it turned...
Ships stranded in Persian Gulf quietly coordinate with U.S. Navy to exit Hormuz
Nearly 40 ships previously stranded in the Persian Gulf have exited through the Strait of Hormuz over the past three weeks as vessels quietly coordinate with the U.S. Navy, according to Lloyd's List Intelligence. Some shipowners are submitting their transit plans to the Naval Cooperation and Guidance for Shipping group in Bahrain, said Richard Meade, editor-in-chief of Lloyd's List, in a briefing Thursday. The assumption is that the U.S. Navy is providing limited assurances that it will...
Oil exports through the Strait of Hormuz might not return to levels seen before the Iran war
The oil market might face a new reality after the Iran war in which exports through the Strait of Hormuz do not return to the levels once considered normal, as shipowners now have to weigh the risk that fighting could abruptly break out in the volatile Persian Gulf. And Western commercial ships will likely hesitate to sail through Hormuz if it remains under Iran's de facto control, especially if they have to coordinate with the Revolutionary Guard, putting them at risk of violating U.S....
Commentary: A harder world requires a different sort of multilateralism
Commentary: A harder world requires a different sort of multilateralism The question is not so much about whether multilateralism will endure, but how it is evolving, say Sarah Teo and Jane Chan from the S Rajaratnam School of International Studies. SINGAPORE: “I’m sorry to say this here.
Trump threatened to 'blow up' Oman — why the tiny Gulf kingdom is caught between DC and Iran
President Donald Trump's threat to "blow up" Oman if the Gulf kingdom didn't "behave" has exposed a rare rupture with one of Washington's most valuable Middle East partners — a country that has spent decades quietly serving as America's backchannel to Iran. "The strait's gotta be open to everybody," the president said during a Cabinet meeting Wednesday. "It's international waters.
No Dong Jun, but plenty of China at Shangri-La Dialogue
No Dong Jun, but plenty of China at Shangri-La Dialogue China’s defence minister may not have attended this year’s Shangri-La Dialogue but the country still loomed large and remained at the centre of discussion. SINGAPORE: Chinese Defence Minister Dong Jun may have skipped the Shangri-La Dialogue for the second year in a row - but China still loomed large, featuring prominently in regional security discussions, including a maritime dispute involving a Dutch warship from earlier in the week...