Specifications
''Independence'' measured in length and 23,719 gross register tons under the US measurement system; under European measurement rules both ships would have been around . Capable of cruising at 26Service history
American Export Lines
SS ''Independence'', , and the , SS ''Constitution'' were built by Bethlehem Steel Corporation in yard 1618 of its Fore River Shipyard inAtlantic Far East Line
In January 1974, both ''Independence'' and ''Constitution'' were sold to the Atlantic Far East Line Inc., Monrovia, being part of the massive C.Y. Tung group. ''Independence'' was renamed ''Oceanic Independence'' and after a refit commenced cruising with a new passenger capacity of 950 passengers. However, ''Constitution'', renamed ''Oceanic Constitution'', was laid up at Hong Kong on August 4, 1974. ''Oceanic Independence'' continued to cruise until being laid up as well at Hong Kong on January 17, 1976. In November that year there were rumors that the ship was to be sold to Shannon SA, of Panama, but this did not happen. ''Oceanic Independence'' remained laid up and was renamed ''Sea Luck I'' for a short time but soon after renamed ''Oceanic Independence'' once more.American Hawaii Cruises
As they were no longer American-flagged ships, C.Y. Tung was not able to operate them within American waters. In 1979, however, both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives approved their return to the States. In 1980 C.Y. Tung transferred ''Oceanic Independence'' to their newly established, US based American Hawaii Cruises Inc. After extensive repairs and a refit at the Kawasaki Dockyard Co. Ltd, Kobe Japan, ''Oceanic Independence'' was configured to accommodate 750 one class passengers and was listed as being . ''Oceanic Independence'' departed on a maiden cruise in June, 1980, operating 7-Day cruises around the Hawaiian Islands from Honolulu. On September 24, 1981, the cruise ship sustained minor damage off the coast of Nawiliwili, however passengers were safely taken ashore and flown home. After repairs in San Francisco the vessel returned to service. American Hawaii Cruises Inc became part of the American Global Line, Inc, in 1982 and restored the original name ''Independence'' to the liner once again. With ''Independence'' having been successful in 1980, ''Oceanic Constitution'' was refitted in Taiwan and departed for Honolulu with a passenger capacity of 1,088 and listed at . There the cruise ship was transferred to the American Global Line, Inc, was rechristened by Princess Grace of Monaco under the ship's original name, ''Constitution'', and commenced cruising out of Honolulu in June 1982. In 1984 passenger capacity was reduced to 800 and in 1987 both ships were officially reregistered in Honolulu. In 1994 ''Independence'' was withdrawn from service and headed to Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry dock Company for an extensive refit. In April 1996, however, American Hawaii Cruises decided to retire the then 46-year-old ''Constitution'' due to high running costs and required renovations. Laid up due to the company's financial problems, many of ''Constitution's'' parts were used on ''Independence''. After the demise of ''Constitution'', the older sister ship became the last US built ocean liner to sail under the American flag. Celebrations were held on board during ''Independences 1,000th voyage in August 1999. With the 2001 bankruptcy of American Hawaii Cruises, the owners of the American Hawaii Line, ''Independence'' became the property of the US Maritime Administration and sailed from Honolulu to San Francisco, arriving on November 8, 2001 to be greeted and led by the fireboat ''Phoenix''.Norwegian Cruise Line
In February 2003, ''Independence'' was sold at auction for US$4 million toFinal journey to Alang
Departure from San Francisco
''Oceanic'' was towed out of San Francisco Bay on February 8, 2008 for Singapore. Rumors had been swirling that the ship was ultimately destined for a scrapyard in India or Bangladesh, but had been stopped due to a complaint filed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency that the ship was being towed to an overseas scrap yard. Global Marketing Systems, the last owner of ''Oceanic'', was fined $518,500 for exporting the ship for scrap without prior removal of toxins such as asbestos and PCBs.Name change and departure to Alang
In 2009 ''Oceanic'' was illegally renamed ''Platinum II'' and departed Dubai for Alang, being towed by a tug ''Barakhoda''. The tug apparently lost all power and setting the two vessels adrift some 25 km off Alang. Another tug was sent to assist ''Barakhoda'' and crew of nine.Scrapping at Alang
In October 2009, a ship claiming to be the "SS ''Platinum-II''" was turned away from the Alang breaker yard in India when it was discovered the ship was actually the former ''Oceanic''. Indian authorities alleged that it had been renamed and supplied with falsified papers in order to evade regulations on toxic materials. In a dramatic turn-around, the Ministry of Environment and Forests intervened and gave their approval, granting ''Platinum II'' permission to be beached at Alang's shipbreaking yard. After much controversy and with demands that the ship be returned to the U.S. for being illegally exported, ''Platinum II'' was abandoned at Gopnath in a region south of the Alang on the Gujarat coast. Although probably no more toxic than most ships built in the 1950s and 1960s, the vessel was deemed such for the minute amounts of radioactive materials found in the smoke detection systems and for the usual asbestos and PCBs contained in ships of that generation. According to local sources, ''Platinum II'' was laying off shore with guards on board to protect the ship from looting and vandals. Also, reports of the hull being cracked (an unsubstantiated charge made by the ship's owners to urge the Gujarat Maritime Board to allow the ship to be beached in November) appeared to have some truth. The tug that delivered the ship into Gujarat waters had likely already been beached for scrapping, so another vessel would have been required to pull ''Platinum II'' off the embankment for the short trip to Alang.Wrecked off Alang
After running aground in February 2010, mud had made it into ''Platinum IIs cracked hull. Later news reports from India claimed the ship, aground and abandoned at Gopnath, some ten miles south of Alang, was beginning to suffer structural cracks and would never be able to be moved from there. In March 2010 the vessel's hull cracked aft of the accommodation (roughly at one third of the length from the stern) and the entire hull was lying at an angle of about 35 degrees. The ship was scrapped on the spot throughout the remainder of 2010 and the wreck was reportedly completely gone by January 2011. While under investigation by the Gujarati anti-terrorist unit for smuggling radioactive, hazardous, and toxic waste to organized crime, the former ''Independence'' was looted in May–June 2010 during a cyclone.See also
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