A giant container ship, almost as long as New York's Empire State Building is high, became wedged during a sandstorm last Tuesday in Egypt's Suez Canal.
Within days, it causes a traffic jam of over 300 cargo ships at the two ends of the crucial global shipping lane.
On Monday, nearly a week later, tug boats helped turn the stern 80 percent in the right direction, canal authorities say, but the vessel is not yet afloat.

Here is what we know so far:

The 400-metre (1,300-foot) long, 200,000-tonne MV Ever Given, categorised as a "megaship", veers off course in the canal when a gale-force duststorm hits Egypt's Sinai Desert and much of the Middle East.
The 59-metre wide Panama-flagged vessel becomes stuck at about 0540 GMT near the southern end of the canal and diagonally blocks the man-made waterway between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea.
The ship's operator, Evergreen Marine Corp of Taiwan, says the vessel -- en route from Yantian, China to the Dutch port of Rotterdam -- "ran aground after a suspected gust of wind hit it".
But the head of the Suez Canal Authority (SCA), Osama Rabie, tells reporters Saturday the accident may have been due to "technical or human errors", rather than 40-knot winds.
The 25 crew are unhurt, the hull and cargo undamaged, and there is no oil leak, say Singapore-based Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement (BSM), which provides management services for the megaship.

A handout picture released by the Suez Canal Authority shows a view of  MV 'Ever Given' as it remains lodged sideways impeding traffic across Suez Canal


What's the impact?

The vessel blocks the shipping artery through which more than 10 percent of global maritime trade passes, much of it oil and grain.
The Suez Canal, opened in 1869 and widened since, is a crucial shortcut between Asia and Europe that saves ships from having to navigate around Africa.
As a result of the accident, more than 300 vessels are treading water at either end of the canal, says Rabie.
Old sections of the canal are reopened to ease the congestion -- but this doesn't solve the fundamental problem, as there is only one lane on the southern end where the ship is stuck.
The blockage of the global trade chokepoint hits world oil markets, as traders anticipate delays in deliveries.
Crude futures surge six percent on Wednesday, but prices tumble Thursday due to nagging pandemic concerns and inflation fears, wiping out those gains.
"We've never seen anything like it before," says Ranjith Raja, Middle East oil and shipping researcher at international financial data firm Refinitiv.
"It is likely that the congestion... will take several days or weeks to sort out as it will have a knock-on effect on other convoys."
Lloyd's List, a shipping data and news company, says firms are being forced to consider "taking the far longer route around the Cape of Good Hope to get to Europe or the east coast of North America", a diversion that can take an additional 12 days.
Shipping expert Rose George tells AFP on Friday the blockage was certain to cause price increases for consumers around the world.
In signs of the knock-on effects, Syrian authorities say Saturday they had been forced to ration already scarce fuel supplies, while Romania's animal health agency says 11 ships carrying livestock out of the country were affected by the traffic suspension.
Egypt is losing some $12-14 million in revenue from the canal for each day it is closed, Rabie says, while Lloyd's List says the blockage is holding up an estimated $9.6 billion worth of cargo each day between Asia and Europe.

What's next?

Egyptian authorities deploy 14 additional tugboats to free the stricken ship, says Rabie. On Saturday night, the ship moves "30 degrees," he says, calling it "a good sign".
The Ever Given's owner, Japanese ship-leasing firm Shoei Kisen, says the work includes crushing and removing rocks to free the ship.
The canal authority has said between 15,000 and 20,000 cubic metres of sand would have to be removed in order to reach a depth of 12-16 metres and refloat the ship.
Early Monday, tugs had succeeded in shifting the front and back of the ship, to reorientate it "80 percent in the right direction," Rabie said.
The SCA chief calls the start of the refloating process a "success", but an official from Ever Given's owners Shoei Kisen says that while the ship "has turned", it "is not afloat".
Further efforts to refloat the vessel were due to get underway late morning local time on Monday.