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Ship Owners Fined $1.2M for Oil Spill

A judge fined owners of a cargo ship $1.2 million on Friday over a major oil spill that stained 35 miles of Australia's east coast, including popular surf beaches.

BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — A judge fined owners of a cargo ship $1.2 million on Friday over a major oil spill that stained 35 miles (56 kilometers) of Australia's east coast including popular surf beaches.

Queensland state Supreme Court Justice Kiernan Dorney also ordered the owners Swire Navigation Co. Ltd. and Bluewind Shipping Ltd. to publish an apology in Brisbane's leading newspaper. The companies had pleaded guilty to causing the March 2009 spill.

The companies, which each own a 50 percent stake in the ship MV Pacific Adventurer, have already paid 25 million Australian dollars ($25 million) toward the AU$31 million cost of cleaning up the spill from the state capital Brisbane north to the white sands of the Sunshine Coast tourist strip and two tourist islands.

Containers tumbled overboard during a storm, piercing the hull of the Hong Kong-registered ship, which spilled 71,300 gallons (270,000 liters) of oil.

The owners' lawyer Tony Glynn had requested the fine of AU$600,000 for each company, describing that as an appropriate penalty. Prosecutors had sought a total fine of AU$3.5 million.

Charges were dropped this week against the ship's Manila-based captain Bernardino Gonzales Santos, its charterer Swire Shipping Ltd., and manager China Navigation Co. Ltd.