A luxury round-the-world cruise ship beset with technical delays and docked in rainy Belfast since May is finally set to depart late Monday, prompting celebration among its passengers. "We are going to have one heck of a time tonight, we are going to party like there's no tomorrow," beaming passenger Joe Martino told AFP. But even Monday's departure was hit with yet another technical hiccup.

Dozens of passengers were left waiting in Belfast's cruise terminal beyond the scheduled boarding time as a last piece of required paperwork was held up. After Mike Petersen, head of the US-based firm Villa Vie Residences that owns the Odyssey residential cruise ship, at last announced the green light for the ship's exit passengers cheered and hugged each other. "The elation, the exhilaration of getting on that ship, when it takes off it will be the feeling of a lifetime," said Martino, 61, a bearded actor from Chicago, who spent all the last four months waiting in Belfast.

Another ecstatic passenger Holly Hennessy, holding her cat called "Captain", said: "I've been in Belfast for four months and two days, but hey, who's counting!" The Odyssey was scheduled to set sail from the Northern Irish capital on May 30 on a three-and-a-half-year cruise. But outfitting, certification processes and engine repairs all took much longer than expected. "Everything that could go wrong went wrong," said Martino.

The ship had undergone repairs for engine trouble in drydock at Belfast's Harland & Wolff, the.