FOOTBALL soccer hooligans responsible for the night of riot and
violence which early yesterday forced the North Sea ferry Tor Britannia
to put back to Harwich, and in which a man disappeared overboard and is
presumed to have drowned, were high on drink and drugs.
Scores of police with dogs yesterday boarded the ship when it returned
to Harwich. About 150 people were taken off the ship to be questioned,
and she then resumed her voyage to Gothenburg in Sweden. Most of those
taken off the ship were sent to London by train under heavy police
escort, but eight were later charged with a variety of offences,
including criminal damage, and were released on bail.
The scale of the disorder on the Scandinavian Seaways vessel, its
participants intoxicated by supplies of the drug LSD and alcohol, was
described over the ship's radio to the Dutch Coast Guard by an off-duty
British policeman on board.
His message warned of ''positive danger'' to the crowded ship and its
856 passengers, and said the rioting was caused by ''certain elements of
the very worst of the 'professional' English soccer hooligans''. The
officer talked of heavy drinking and drug-taking, mainly of ''readily
available'' LSD, by more than 200 supporters heading for the
Sweden-England World Cup match and engaged in ''widespread incidents of
disorder''.
And he said the man lost overboard, 24-year-old Mr Robert Ayling, from
Plymouth, was under the influence of LSD when he panicked after a fire
extinguisher was let off and jumped overboard. He added: ''The sole
witness to this event was himself under the influence of LSD.''
As the Tor Britannia and its remaining passengers sailed again from
Harwich last night, its owners confirmed the football fans had caught
them out by booking individually. A spokesman said Scandinavian Seaways
had a long-standing policy of not carrying large groups of men, but in
this case ''there was no way of proving whether they were going to the
football match or not''.
The ferry, crowded with Scandinavian families and children, had set
out from Harwich at 5pm on Sunday with most of its passengers looking
forward to the usual happy, uneventful journey to Gothenburg. The
luxurious Tor and its sister ships, complete with swimming pool and
sauna for the long relaxing journey, are rarely bothered by England's
most unwanted export.
Heavy drinking was wrongly thought to have been ruled out by duty free
restrictions and high bar tariffs, but by 10pm, when Mr Ayling went
overboard, the rioting was at its height and the Tor Britannia had
become a battleground.
One Swedish passenger, Thomas Wellsden, from Malmo, was in the disco
when English passengers began singing and chanting football club
slogans. ''They were very noisy, but at first there was nothing
frightening. Then they started rocking the roulette wheel and
overturning chairs. A croupier asked them to get out and a bit of a
fight began.''
It was well into the morning, at 7.35, when the policeman's message to
the Dutch Coast Guard explained why the vessel was heading back to
Harwich and leaving the area of the search for the missing man. He said:
''There have been widespread incidents of public disorder since persons
have been drinking heavily and taking drugs, predominantly LSD, believed
to be readily available.
''As a result of this incident, tension has increased on board and
there is now positive danger to the vessel, crew and other passengers.''
The ferry operators said last night that they had not known football
fans were among the passengers joining the ship.
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