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Meanwhile, on the other side of Africa...

5 Ship Crew Hospitalized after Pirates Attack in Nigeria

Five Chinese crew members are being hospitalized after a pirate attack on a general cargo vessel, the News Agency of Nigeria reported on Monday night.

The attack occurred on Sunday at about 10:00 pm in Lagos, Joseph Babatunde, Agency Manager of GMT Shipping Nigeria Ltd, was quoted as saying by News Agency of Nigeria.

Babatunde said that five armed pirates in a speed boat attacked the ship, ransacked it and beat up everybody in the vessel.

He said the pirates shot the master of the vessel in the leg while the representative of the ship owner was shot in the chest and neck.

Babatunde said the pirates collected money from the crew and disembarked immediately.

A source in the Harbour Department of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) confirmed the attack and said the vessel had been anchored at berth 9 in Apapa port.

"We cannot get any report yet from the vessel's captain and the other crew members as they were seriously injured," a source who pleaded anonymity said.

Officials at the Chinese embassy in Abuja and consulate general in Lagos had not been informed about the incident as Xinhua called them separately Monday night.

Original story here :
http://english.cri.cn/6909/2010/05/18/1781s570347.htm
 
6 Somali Pirates Sentenced To Death In Yemen
5/18/2010 7:36 AM ET

(RTTNews) - A court in Yemen has sentenced six Somali pirates to death while jailing six others for 10 years for attacking two Yemeni oil tankers and killing two soldiers, reports said on Tuesday.

All 12 convicts were present at the State Security Court in the capital Sanaa when trial judge Muhssein Alwan pronounced the verdict.

It was during a rescue operation mounted by the Yemeni Navy that the buccaneers were captured after they seized an oil tanker and attempted to seize a second one sailing along with it in the Arabian Sea on April 26.

According to Yemeni authorities, the two vessels had been emptied of their cargo earlier and were on their way from Nashtoon to Aden in Southern Yemen when they came under attack and two Yemeni soldiers were killed and one went missing during the operation launched to free them.

Somalia which has not had a functioning government since 1991 has become an epicenter of sea-piracy which is viewed by its impoverished youth as an easy means of getting rich.

Despite international efforts to weed out the menace, corsairs continue to operate with impunity and some of their leaders are known to have amassed vast sums of money received as ransom for kidnapings.

Meanwhile, in a recent report the International Maritime Bureau(IMB) said there was a drop in the number of ship hijackings by pirates this year compared with the same period last year and this was attributed to the close watch maintained by naval forces in the dangerous waters of the Gulf of Aden as well as steps taken by mercantile marines.

Original story here :
http://www.rttnews.com/Content/GeneralNews.aspx?Id=1308777&SM=1
 
It's been a bit of a busy news day today!

Somali Pirate Pleads Guilty In US Court To Hijacking Charges

A Somali pirate captured by the U.S. military has pleaded guilty in a federal court in Manhattan to charges pressed against him, in connection with the hijacking of an American container off the coast of Africa in 2009, said prosecutors on Tuesday.

U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement issued Tuesday that Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse has pleaded guilty to two counts of hijacking maritime vessels, two counts of kidnapping and two counts hostage taking.

"What we did was wrong," a transcript of Muse's remarks translated into English quoted him as telling the court during Tuesday's hearing. "I am very sorry for all of this. It happened because of the situation in Somalia."

Muse was captured on 12th April 2009 after US Navy sharpshooters rescued the captain of Maersk Alabama container ship, being held hostage by the pirates in a life boat in the Indian ocean after attempts to hijack the vessel failed.

Muse was later extradited to New York to face charges of attempting to hijack a U.S. ship and had earlier pleaded not guilty to the charges. He is the only sole surviving accused pirate from the foiled hijack bid.


Muse was indicted in the United States on charges of piracy in January this year. He is accused of involvement in the hijacking of two other ships before the Maersk Alabama. Muse faces life in prison if convicted of the charges of hostage-taking and kidnapping. He is scheduled to be sentenced on 19th October.

Original story here :
http://www.rttnews.com/Content/MarketSensitiveNews.aspx?Id=1309793&SM=1

And this one is a bit interesting...

Arctic Sea Sailor Seized by Pirates
18 May 2010
The Moscow Times

A Russian sailor aboard the Arctic Sea ship that mysteriously disappeared in a purported pirate attack last summer has been abducted in Cameroon, a sailors union said.

A group of about 20 gunmen boarded the Greek-owned North Spirit vessel as it anchored in the port of Douala late Sunday and seized the sailor, Igor Shumik, and the ship's Russian captain, Boris Tersintsev, the Russian Professional Sailors Union said.

"The pirates disabled all radio and navigation equipment, took valuables, money and personal effects from the crew members' cabins and made captain Boris Tersintsev, a resident of Vladivostok, and senior mechanic Igor Shumik get into their boat at gunpoint," the union said in a statement.

"The men's whereabouts is still unknown," it said.

The ship, which had a Russian-Ukrainian crew, was flying the flag of St. Vincent and the Grenadines and was managed by the Greek company Balthellas Chartering S.A., it said.

Shumik, born in 1963, was among the 15 sailors aboard the Arctic Sea, which disappeared for nearly a month last summer while carrying a $2 million shipment of timber from Finland to Algeria. Russian authorities say the ship was hijacked near Sweden by pirates seeking a ransom and have denied speculation that it was carrying a secret cargo of weapons.

The Russian Navy intercepted the Arctic Sea off the coast of western Africa and flew most of the sailors home.

The Foreign Ministry said Tuesday that it was keeping close contact with Cameroonian authorities about the two abducted sailors.

“No demands have as of yet come from the abductors about the terms for [the sailors'] release. The ship is still at the Douala port,” ministry spokesman Igor Lyakin-Frolov told Itar-Tass.

Original story here :
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/arctic-sea-sailor-seized-by-pirates/406244.html
 
Somalia: Puntland security detain Pirates ringleader

Somaliweyn –Mohammed Omar Hussein

A senior and famous Somali pirate whose name appears on top in a list of American most wanted Somali pirates has fallen in the hands of the authority of the semiautonomous state of Puntland in eastern Somalia.

The United State of America has earlier announced to have frozen the wealth of the ringleader whose name is Abshir Cabdullahi Abshir Boyah.

The famous Pirate Mr. Boyah is known to be fostering the strongest Islamist faction in Somalia (Al-Shabab) with whatever he gets for the vessels voyaging off the coast of the Somali waters, be it money, weapons and other valuable materials.

Mr. Boyah the proud pirate was on Tuesday apprehended by the security personal of Puntland state while he was in Garowe town the capital of Puntland intending to a destination which the immigration department has not yet specified.

While Abshir Boyah was apprehended he had $29 Million dollars inside his car and 2 Pistols.

“The arrested man Mr. Boyah is a famous individual among all the other Somali pirates, and he can be termed as the pioneer of the Somali pirates in Puntland state, he has invested them with all the necessary materials which can facilitate in hijacking vessels voyaging in the Indian ocean and as far as the red sea, some of these materials are weapons, speedboats and some other related items” said Abdi Hirsi Qarjab the regional commissioner of Nugal region in Puntland.

Somaliweyn had the opportunity to reach one of the pirates’ through the phone, and asked what sort of a man is Boyah.

“Mr. Abshir Boyah is the father of the pirates in Puntland, he is the founder, and his task was merely to dispatch pirates to different directions, and watches the vessels which are coming to the shore and which group has first anchored a vessel on the shore” said a Somali pirate talking to Somaliweyn in condition of anonymity.

Original story here :
http://www.somaliweyn.org/pages/news/May_10/21May11.html
 
Now this is starting to hit a little to close to home for me!

Pirates terrorize boaters on Texas lake along Mexican border

by Christopher Heath / KENS 5

ZAPATA, TEXAS -- It sounds like something out of yesteryear: Pirates attacking boats and sailors, robbing them of their treasures. But it's not on the high seas, but in deep South Texas.

With machine guns in hand, Mexico's deadliest cartel is patrolling the waters of a Texas border lake.

These pirates already have hit several boats on Falcon Lake near Zapata, which is about an hour south of Laredo.

If you go too far across the lake and past the international boundary bouy, you are in Mexican territory and subject to attacks by pirates toting assault weapons.

"It is unsafe in Mexico. Don't go to Mexico," warned Game Warden Capt. Fernando Cervantes. "We can not cross over onto that side. If a boat goes across, that's it. We stop there at the line."

One man fishing on the lake Thursday, Lucas Garza, said he'd be staying away from the boundary.

"We're not planning on going to that side," he said. "We just know there's no good news on that side."

He and his friends have heard the warnings about Zeta cartel pirates ambushing boats on the Mexican side, operating with virtual impunity as they steal cash and electronics at machine gun-point.

At least three boats have been robbed so far, and authorities say they are investigating a fourth incident, as well.

The fear of what lurks beyond the boundary is keeping even local fisherman well within the U.S. side of the lake.

U.S. authorities say there just isn't a Mexican law presence on the other side of the lake, so boaters who do venture to that part of Falcon Lake are on their own.

Original story and video here :
http://www.kens5.com/home/pirates-94535754.html

And another related story, one man tells KENS 5's Christopher Heath about how he escaped pirates in his speedboat recently :
http://www.kens5.com/video/featured...escape-from-Falcon-Lake-pirates-94586874.html
 
While this is not technically pirate news, it shows why things have been rather quite of Somali for the past week or so, looks like rough weather has set in again.

Navy rescues ship crew from cyclone

A Royal Navy warship on Nato counter-piracy operations rescued the crew of a merchant vessel after it was caught in a tropical cyclone off the Somalian coast, it has emerged.

The drama began early on Thursday when HMS Chatham received a distress call from the cargo ship MV Dubai Moon which was listing heavily and was in danger of running aground on a reef.

In a three-hour operation in rough seas and high winds, the warship's helicopter was launched and 23 seamen winched to safety.

Commander Simon Huntingdon, HMS Chatham's commanding officer, said: "This rescue was conducted in the most challenging sea conditions imaginable and I am extremely proud of my ship's company whose sole focus was to assist the Master and crew of MV Dubai Moon.

"It was, without doubt, the professionalism and courage of my sailors and aircrew that ensured this rescue was a success."

Speaking after the rescue, Hassan Madar, the Ethiopian Master of the MV Dubai Moon, said: "Normally we operate close to the coast, but we had to go far out to sea to avoid pirates. That meant we could not find shelter from the storm.

"If we had not been rescued by the Royal Navy and Nato we would have died with my ship. They were the only people to respond to our distress call. We owe them our lives."

As part of its anti-piracy mission off the Horn of Africa, the HMS Chatham crew destroyed two pirate boats off the coast of Tanzania earlier this month.

Original story here :
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5gkemPXvkcsGC71tzmFZEijYuKVHw
 
U.S. destroyer shadows ship under pirate control

(CNN) -- A U.S. destroyer is shadowing a ship off the coast of Somalia after it was taken over by 50 pirates, authorities said.

The M/V Iceberg was identified last week after the USS McFaul conducted a 36-hour surveillance mission, the multi-national Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement. The USS McFaul began shadowing the Panamanian-flagged vessel May 19 before the M/V Iceberg reversed course and began heading toward the Somali coast.

"We cannot be sure what the pirates' plan was if they had not been interrupted," said Rear Adm. Beom Rim Lee, commander of the Combined Maritime Forces task force.

"The vessel may have been on its way to either assist other pirates in distress, or look for another merchant vessel to attack," he said.

The M/V Iceberg was last been seen off the coast of the Somali town of Garacaad, a known pirate haven, but its exact location was unknown until USS McFaul positively identified it. "Further investigation showed the name of the ship had been crudely painted over" in an effort to disguise it, which caused confusion in identifying it, the Combined Maritime Forces statement said.

The USS McFaul had initially requested to board the ship to check on the crew. The M/V Iceberg denied it had been taken over, saying it was having mechanical difficulties. Eventually, crew members radioed back saying they had been taken hostage by heavily armed pirates, officials said.

The M/V Iceberg has a crew of 24 from Yemen, India, Ghana, Sudan, Pakistan and the Philippines, officials said.

Cmdr. Ronald W. Toland, Jr., commanding officer of USS McFaul, said he tried to ensure the safety of the crew first.

"Given the report of heavily armed pirates on board, it was more prudent to monitor the ship's movement, rather than attempt a rescue," he said.

Original story here :
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/africa/05/24/somalia.pirates/

And this ...

Coast Guard bares new modus operandi of foreign pirates

The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) on Monday disclosed a new modus operandi of pirates which involves seizing vessels plying international routes before selling these as renamed ships to unsuspecting buyers.

PCG commandant Admiral Wilfredo Tamayo said the scheme was uncovered following the recent arrest of seven suspected Indonesian pirates in General Santos City.

Tamayo said pirates now resort to seizing the entire ship, citing at least two cases where foreign ships and their crew traveling along international waters were abducted by these sea outlaws and brought to Mindanao.

“In order to avoid detection, pirates would rename the tugboats or vessels," Tamayo said, adding that pirate attacks are usually carried out at night.

He explained that after defacing the name tags of the seized vessels, the pirates would sell it to prospective buyers, including those from the Philippines. These vessels are sold legally for about P20 million.

The first incident, according to Tamayo, involved the MT Asta seized by pirates on February 7 and renamed Roxy-1. The “new" ship was later found in Surigao del Norte.

On April 27, pirates likewise took hostage the Malaysian tugboat Atlantic 3 as it was towing the barge Atlantic 5. The tugboat, which was renamed Marlin VII, was later retrieved in General Santos City, resulting in the arrest of the seven Indonesians.

In all incidents, the pirates would eventually release the ships’ crew, who would then be allowed to board a life raft near the Spratly’s Islands.

Test case

The case involving the arrest of the Indonesians would thus serve as test case for piracy, according to Tamayo. “Before, we only filed armed robbery cases because pirates would only board vessels to take valuables and then leave the ships," he said.

Tamayo called for cooperation among neighboring countries in a bid to address sea piracy following the discovery of the new scheme.

“(Sea piracy) adversely affects our local shipbuilding industry. There is a need to establish closer monitoring and information sharing with neighboring Association of Southeast Asian Nations," he said.

He said they have stepped up efforts to gather information and are now drawing up measures to understand the pattern used in the modus operandi to counter the pirates’ illegal activities.

He likewise asked neighboring countries to report similar incidents in their respective countries to Singapore-based Regional Cooperation Agreement on Combating Piracy and Armed Robbery Against Ships in Asia-Information Sharing Center (RECAAP-ISC).

The Office of Transportation Security (OTS), Philippine Navy (PN), Philippine National Police-Maritime Group (PNP-Marig), Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) are working with the PCG to locally address the problem of piracy. - JA/KBK, GMANews.TV

Original story here :
http://www.gmanews.tv/story/191776/coast-guard-bares-new-modus-operandi-of-foreign-pirates
 
I can hardly wait to hear the acronym for this new U.N. bureaucracy, I am sure it will have those pirates quaking in their sandals!

UN to consider legislation to punish pirates

The United Nations has decided to join the fight against pirates from the Horn of Africa.

At a three-day international conference held in Istanbul and co-hosted by the UN and Turkey, delegations from 55 countries and 12 international organizations agreed to establish an international agency to fight piracy. The new agency, which has not been named yet, would be used to transport pirates to places where they can be tried and punished, which will mean that the countries and private businesses will pay for the pirates' tickets, lawyers and prison sentences.

It usually takes time for the unwieldy machinery of the UN to start operating, but Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the organization's experts were already working to streamline international piracy laws, the results of which would soon be published. These decisions are set forth in the Istanbul declaration, which in itself is a major achievement.

Up until now, international law and national laws of most of the countries whose vessels are patrolling the waters off the coast of Somalia and the Horn of Africa had so many loopholes that it was easier to let the pirates go than bring them to justice.

The latest example of this occurred on May 5, when, after the hijacked oil tanker Moscow University was liberated by the Russian large anti-submarine ship Marshal Shaposhnikov, ten pirates were quietly put in a boat and let go to perish on the high seas. In principle, the Shaposhnikov crew acted mercifully compared to other navies: they let the pirates go, instead of hanging them on the spot.

Shortly before the Istanbul conference, Abdirasaq Adan, a representative of Somalia's Ministry of Information and Youth, said Russia has not yet asked forgiveness for its inhuman action, which would seriously affect diplomatic relations.

This was clearly an overly emotional response. Somalia's Transitional Federal Government (TFG) so far controls only a few blocks of downtown Mogadishu, the capital of the country, with the help of African Union troops.

While Istanbul was hosting the UN conference on Somalia, pirates who had hijacked a Yemeni merchant vessel in April were tried in Sana, the capital of Yemen. Six of them were sentenced to death and immediately executed (which usually means beheading in Yemen), and another six, who were not involved in the murder of two Yemeni seamen, will spend ten years in prison. Given the prison conditions in Yemen, which have not changed since the time of One Thousand and One Nights, this could be a worse fate than capital punishment.

The United States is so far the only country to try Somali pirates on its own soil. On May 19, the New York court convicted the Somali pirate who commanded the hijacking of the American container ship Maersk Alabama off the coast of Somalia last year. The sentence will be announced on October 19. The pirate is facing 34 years in prison.

Another 11 Somali pirates, accused of separate attacks on two Navy ships off the coast of Africa, are awaiting trial at the U.S. naval base in Norfolk, Virginia.

It must be said that the Americans have been acting most consistently, possibly because they have the experience and the money. The U.S. has been transporting culprits from the Persian Gulf and the Horn of Africa since Operation Desert Storm and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Moreover, the U.S. only tries pirates who attack American vessels.

The situation with the flag-of-convenience ships is much more complicated. For example, which country should try pirates that attack a vessel sailing under a Liberian flag in international waters (such as Moscow University), whose crew includes two, three or even a dozen nationalities, and whose owners are registered in Singapore, Hong Kong or London?

The EU countries have recently agreed that pirates could be tried in the countries near where they were apprehended. The EU has relevant agreements with Kenya and the Seychelles Islands, but the courts in those countries can no longer cope with the volume of cases. Kenya stopped accepting such cases this May because of the 60 cases for piracy off the Horn of Africa still pending in its courts.

All serious experts say that the fight against piracy should begin on dry land. Pirates will not stop hijacking vessels as long as Somalia is divided into a patchwork of monarchies and caliphates, without a central government.

The 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, which defines acts of piracy, must be revised to include more clear definitions, analysts say. The international community should also draft and approve a common code for punishing piracy. Leading maritime powers must be able to use clear international legislation to raid pirates' bases in coastal countries. And lastly, countries must stop paying ransom to pirates.

If the UN drafts a criminal code for pirates, this will greatly help to fight their criminal business.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author's alone and do not necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

Original story here :
http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20100525/159141439.html
 
I predict the new agency will be named UNPAPBNRDAAI: United Nations Plotting Against Piracy, But Not Really Doing Anything About It. :cheeky
 
xD: That one does kinda just roll off the tongue!

How about UNCAPED : Useless Notions Coalition Against Piracy and Educated Diplomats!

UNPAID : Useless Notions Pretending Another Incident Disappeared!
UNCAPOPSWLI : Useless Notions Creating Astounding Piles Of Paperwork So We Look Important!

And my personal favorite, UNPAVEDBEAVER : Useless Notions Providing Another Vast Endless Diplomatic Bureaucracy Enhancing Another Vision Everyone Regrets! :woot
 
Ok, before I get to far off topic, this is just as hilarious : Shark fishing with rocket launchers and AK 47's!

Somali Pirate Suspects Say They Were Fishing For Sharks

Ayinde O. Chase - AHN News Editor

Rotterdam, Netherlands (AHN) - Trial began Tuesday for five suspected Somali pirates, aged between 25 and 45, on charges of attacking a vessel sailing under a Netherlands Antilles flag. The accused men say they were simply fishing for sharks and not responsible for the hijacking.

The trial, which is the first-ever European trial of suspected Somali pirates, surrounds the attacking of the Turkish freighter Samanyolu in January 2009.

Prosecutors said the men used rocket launchers and assault rifles to attack the vessel and the crew took refuge. Prosecutors' account match up with what the vessel's machinist said in a prepared statement.

The accused, who are facing jail terms of up to 12 years for the attack, told a Dutch court that they are innocent of the charges and were fishing for sharks in the Gulf of Aden, a stretch of sea off the coast of Somalia that has become rife with piracy.

"The intention was to fish," defendant Farah Ahmed Yusuf, 25, told the Rotterdam district court, claiming that when their ship broke down they tried to get help from the passing Samanyolu.

"As we came closer, we put our hands in the air. While we had our hands in the air, they shot at us. They attacked us," claimed Yusuf.

Another defendant, Sayid Ali Garaar, 39, said that his arrest and subsequent imprisonment has placed his and his family's lives at risk.

"I am the victim here," said Garaar. "They destroyed my boat and put my life in danger."

Another suspect said there had been a hijacking plan but it was scrapped.

"The (piracy) plan was abandoned," Abdirisaq Abdulahi Hirsi, 33, told the court.

"The engine (of the skiff) was broken, we had no food and no water and I was ill. We had been at sea for three days, I decided not to follow through (the hijacking), but to die at sea," he said.

Hirsi said he and the other men approached the ship for help with their hands in the air.

The trial is expected to last five days with a judgment slated for June 16.

In another pirate trial in Yemen last week, authorities sentenced six Somali pirates to death and jailed six others for 10 years each in an attack on a Yemeni oil tanker last April that left two crew members dead.

According to the London-based International Maritime Bureau, which monitors maritime crime, pirates attempted 215 attacks on merchant ships off the Somali coast in 2009.

Original story here :
http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7018799003
 
:rofl Were they looking for Megalodons?

You wouldn't believe the picture that came to mind after I seen UNPAVEDBEAVER. :cheeky Methinks I'm a seriously twisted dude. xD:
 
:rofl Were they looking for Megalodons?

You wouldn't believe the picture that came to mind after I seen UNPAVEDBEAVER. :cheeky Methinks I'm a seriously twisted dude. xD:

canada-beaver.gif


Oh yes, I would believe it! xD: I could have come up with one for SHAVED too ...but this is a family show! :cheeky

Errrmmm ...yes well, back to the news!

Boat repels pirate attack off Madagascar

2010/05/26

A SPANISH fishing trawler repelled an attack by pirates off Madagascar yesterday , as South Africa warned that piracy could spread down the continent.

The Echebasta company said: “The boat took evasive manoeuvres and was able to leave the area without suffering any harm to personnel.”

It is the first such attempt recorded in the Mozambique Channel, far further south than most of the attacks, which occur off the coast of Somalia.

The Spanish seiner (tuna boat) was attacked just after pulling back its nets and spotted the pirate skiff when it was only one nautical mile away.

Since foreign navies deployed an armada of warships to curb attacks in the busy Gulf of Aden, Somalia’s ransom-hunting pirates have ventured further away from their coast to capture prey.

The French and Spanish tuna- fishing fleets based in the Indian Ocean had been attacked mainly around the Seychelles archipelago but pirates had rarely ventured as far south as Madagascar.

Last year, another Spanish tuna fishing vessel, the Alakrana, and its crew of 36 were taken hostage for more than a month off the coast of Somalia, where pirates have bases. They were freed after paying a ransom of 4million (about R31.9m) , according to the Somali pirates who captured them.

Yesterday, Justice Minister Jeff Radebe warned an African Renaissance conference in Durban: “If we allow such an illegal activity to fester in one part of Africa, we are sending an open invitation for it to spread to other parts of Africa.”

The conference was attended by delegates from many African countries.

Radebe said South Africa did not rejoice in the fact that the long route around Cape Town was being considered a viable alternative to the Somali coast, which was infested by pirates.

South Africa believed that the whole continent should find a solution to the problem.

Although most pirate activity took place in international waters, a response strategy in terms of jurisprudence was needed, Radebe said.

The Baltic and International Maritime Council recently urged Somalia and other African countries to co-operate in fighting piracy off their shores. — Sapa

Original story here :
http://www.dispatch.co.za/article.aspx?id=404774

And this...

EU naval forces foil pirate attack on tanker

The EU’s counter-piracy operation scored a spectacular success against pirates this morning by its quick response to a tanker’s distress signal under fire from pirates off the east African coast.

The attack took place off the island of Zanzibar, Tanzania, in east African waters south of Somalia, according to a press release by the EU Naval Force Somalia (EU NAVFOR).

The French tanker, Nordneptune, adopted so-called ”Best Management Practices” by immediately radioing for help and starting evasive manoeuvres. The ship successfully evaded the first attack, but the pirates were still at large.

Within an hour, the EU NAVFOR frigate FS Nivôse, which was in the area, responded to the distress call but during the same interval, Nordneptune, was under attack again, this time by two pirate skiffs.

Nivôse by now was close enough to launch its helicopter and disrupted the attack. The frigate, on closing with the tanker, fired warning shots at the pirate skiffs, which gave up their attacks and fled into Tanzanian territorial waters.

The Tanzanian Coast Guard is continuing the pursuit.

Original story here :
http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/5911590-eu-naval-forces-foil-pirate-attack-on-tanker

And one more...

Somali pirates hijack Yemeni fishing boat
[25/May/2010]

SOCOTRA, May 25 (Saba) - Somali pirates have hijacked a Yemeni fishing boat five nautical miles south of the Socotra island coast.

Head of the Fish Union Branch in the island Ahmed Esa said they had received a letter from the three fishermen who were onboard the boat describing the miracle of their survival.

The fishermen said their boat was intercepted by 12 Somali pirates who had various weapons including machine guns and other dangerous arms.

For his part, the owner of the boat described the incident saying: while I was on fishing along with two friends, we were surprised by a small boat approaching us.

We thought the boat had a technical problem and it was asking for help but then we discovered they were Somali pirates, Ahmed Salim said.

They immediately attacked our boat and aimed weapons at us, he said, adding that the pirates forced them to board the other boat. The pirates ran away on our boat, he said.

He continued saying that the boat on which the pirates came and on which we came back was also for Yemeni fishermen and hijacked by the pirates. After the pirates found out it was about to break down they used it as a trap to take our won, he said.

MD/FR
Saba

Original story here :
http://www.sabanews.net/en/news215347.htm
 
French Frigate Deters Pirate Attack Attempt off Tanzanian Coasts: Captain

A French surveillance frigate under the European naval force Atlanta has deterred an attack attempt by suspected pirates off the Tanzanian coasts against a merchant vessel bearing Cypriot flag, Captain of the French frigate announced on Wednesday.

Commander Guillaume Fontarensky made the remarks at a press conference held at the European Union (EU) delegation in Tanzania, noting that the incident took place on early Tuesday when the frigate Nivose approached the port of Dar es Salaam where she had to make stopover.

The frigate received a call for help of the merchant vessel Nord Neptuna 58 nautical miles (about 107.4 km) in the north of the position of Nivose, which indicated to be attacked by presumed pirates, Fontarensky told reporters.

The frigate then immeidately diverted to carry assistance and sent a helicopter Panther, which deterred the pirates to pursue their boarding attempt onto Nord Neptuna and the attack was thwarted after the merchant vessel informed Nivose at 0400H GMT ( 0700 am local time), the French captain added.

The Panther then tried to stop the flight of the skiffs of presumed pirates by numerous shootings, however, the skiffs of the aggressors, which included respectively four or five persons on board, separated and then escaped near the island of Pema by melting away in fishermen's numerous present boats, as the incident location was exactly between the islands of Unguja and Pemba of the Indian Ocean archipelago of Zanzibar, according to Fontarensky.

The Tanzanian authorities were warned of the entry of the skiffs of presumed pirates in their territorial waters, where the Nivose, as the other ships contributing to the operation Atlanta, cannot intervene, according to the press release by the EUNAVFOR Atlanta frigate of surveillance Nivose.

It is one of the first times that a merchant vessel becomes under the direct threat of an attempt of hijacking next to the Tanzanian territorial waters, which shows that Somali pirates can operate further and further from their coasts, the press release noted.

Res of the story here :
http://english.cri.cn/6966/2010/05/26/167s572467.htm
 
Arctic shipping route is safer

Russia is ready to offer a shorter shipping route that is also free from pirates to companies that are engaged in transcontinental cargo transportation to south-east Asian countries. According to Russian Transport Minister Igor Levitin, “Sovkomflot”, a Russian maritime shipping company, will carry out an experimental voyage to the ports of South Korea, Japan and China from Murmansk through the Arctic in September.

The move is aimed at convincing the shipping companies of the advantages of the northern route. The shipping route between the European regions of Russia and the Far East through the seas of the Arctic and the Pacific was actively worked upon even in the 80s. However, the collapse of the Soviet Union disrupted this and the new Russia has had other serious problems to handle than this severe but short cut alternative to shipping routes passing through the Suez Canal. Paradoxically, pirates operating off the African coast have prompted Russia to revisit this idea. As the international community headed by the United Nations is working out norms and rules of fighting piracy, Russia suggests carrying out maritime transportation from Europe to the ports of South-East Asia through the Arctic waters.

Clearly, this route is quite advantageous, says the president of International Maritime Law Association, Anatoly Kolodkin. “The northern maritime route is much cheaper and faster, - he continues. - Shipping routes around Europe and even around Africa are 4-5 times more expensive than the northern shipping route.”

However, ice layers pose a danger to the northern route, but Russian, icebreakers can guarantee safety to ships and widen the time period that can be used for shipping. Moreover, Russia plans to build small supporting ports where ships can be repaired if necessary and continue sailing.

The task before Russia’s Transport Ministry is to calculate the time needed for ships to sail along the northern route in various seasons to determine the profitability of shipping and its attractiveness for shipping companies. Importantly, ships sailing under the flags of other countries can also use this route. For one, Norway has already shown keen interest in this route.

Original story here :
http://english.ruvr.ru/2010/05/26/8505969.html
 
It is really sad the British government seems to have lost it's backbone.

Caged animals: British yacht couple kidnapped by pirates reveal brutal treatment... and beg Cameron to secure their release

The British couple kidnapped by Somalian pirates more than seven months ago appealed directly to David Cameron last night to help free them and warned they are being treated like ‘animals’.

In a video which showed them looking stronger and more confident than in previous tapes, Paul Chandler warned that the expectations of the kidnap gang had been raised by the change of government in Britain.

Speaking calmly and clearly after 217 days of torment, he said: ‘If the Government is not prepared to help they must say so because the gangsters’ hopes and expectations have been raised because of a new government.’

The 60-year-old civil engineer and his wife Rachel were shown side by side and looking tanned in barren, harsh scrubland on the extraordinary video filmed at the weekend and broadcast on ITN and Channel 4.

Openly and defiantly accusing the armed pirates looking on of mistreating them, Mrs Chandler, 56, an economist, said: ‘We are just animals to them . . . caged up like animals, they don’t care about us and our families at home.’

Her husband went on: ‘It’s not piracy. This is absolutely not piracy. It must not be reported as such. It’s kidnap and even torture. They don’t care whose lives they ruin, they just want the money.

‘They have shown no compassion, the only reason they are interested in us is as a vehicle of raising money, they are only interested in keeping us alive to do so.’

In a message to the Prime Minister, Mr Chandler, unshaven and wearing a faded green T-shirt, said: ‘I would like to say congratulations to David Cameron first. As new Prime Minister we desperately need him to make a definitive public statement of the Government’s attitude to us.

'We are two British citizens. We have been kidnapped in the Seychelles, which was a relatively safe place to be.

‘If the Government can help, and I think they should, we would welcome that please. Either way they must make a statement so that we know where we stand.’

It is the first time the Chandlers have been seen in several weeks.

A news blackout had been in opera tion but it is understood family representatives were made aware of the latest images taken by a freelance Somali cameraman.

As the video was filmed, ten armed kidnappers – described by Mr Chandler as young enough to be his children – were said to have watched from behind the camera but were never shown.

There has been increased concern for the couple since Islamist militants linked to Al Qaeda moved into the area around the Somalian port of Harardhere close to where they were being held earlier this month.

It was reported the Chandlers had been bundled into the boot of a car and driven away as pirates fled the insurgents.

The couple were then made to walk through a forest with their captors and were said to be heading towards the harbour city of Hobyo.

The Chandlers, from Tunbridge Wells, Kent, were kidnapped at gunpoint in the Indian Ocean on October 23 as they sailed their yacht, the Lynn Rival, from the Seychelles to Tanzania during a round-the-world trip.

Rest of the story and some pics and a video here :
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...yacht-couple-kidnapped-pirates-appeal-PM.html
 
:rolleyes:

Navy releases accused Somali pirates held on warship for six weeks

The Navy on Friday released 10 accused Somali pirates who had spent more than six weeks in custody aboard a U.S. warship in the Indian Ocean, Navy officials said.

U.S. officials said they tried to find a country willing to prosecute the alleged pirates, who were captured April 5 in the Arabian Sea by the McFaul, a U.S. guided missile destroyer. The McFaul apprehended the pirates after they had hijacked an Indian cargo ship and taken nine crew members hostage, Navy officials said.

The prisoners were removed from the McFaul on Friday and were being transported back to Somalia, Navy officials said.

U.S., European and other foreign navies that patrol the Indian Ocean have been reluctant to return captured pirates to Somalia -- a practice known as "catch-and-release" -- because the weak government there has little power to do anything about the problem.

Original story here :
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/28/AR2010052804108.html

And this is a bit different...

Saunas, massages help when pirate hunting
Military: Effort off Somalia melds very different cultures

ABOARD THE CARLSKRONA – Drops of sweat trickled down the faces of the pirate hunters on the Swedish warship. They conferred in low voices, finally reaching a consensus: Yes, throw another pitcher of water onto the sauna heater.

Pirate-hunting has come a long way since the Knights of Malta battled the Barbary Corsairs four centuries ago.

Floggings, weevils and scurvy are out. Saunas, fresh bread and massages are in – at least aboard the Swedish warship Carlskrona, the flagship of the European Union’s force to hunt down Somali pirates, who have hijacked 23 ships this year.

Building an international alliance to fight the pirates means navies have to try to harmonize their cultures alongside their weapons and communications systems. Some of the adjustments are serious, like agreeing to common rules of engagement and having lawyers advise warships on how to gather evidence and treat captives.

A handbook produced by the Swedes and given to other European nations not only has such phrases in English and Somali as “No talking” and “Put your weapon down,” but also includes “Calm down” and “We are here to help you” – for use when boarding teams search Somali fishing vessels or boatloads of refugees.

Rest of the story here :
http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/05/28/1204013/saunas-massages-help-when-pirate.html
 
Yemeni navy frees boat, crew captured by pirates

The Yemeni navy has arrested 13 Somali pirates and liberated a fishing boat and its crew four days after they were seized near the island of Socotra, the defence ministry announced today.

The fishing boat's nine crew members were reported to be "safe and sound" after being freed by Yemeni marines operating in cooperation with international forces in the Arabian Sea, naval chief Rouis Abdullah Majur said.

The interior ministry website first reported the act of piracy on Friday, without specifying when it had taken place. The defence ministry report said the boat and crew had remained captive for four days.

Yemeni forces recovered weapons including machine guns and two RPG launchers, the defence ministry newspaper's website 26sep.net cited Majur as saying.

It said the rescue operation took place off Yemen's Al-Mahrah province, which borders Oman, and added that the captured Somalis would face trial in Yemen. The vessel was attacked off Socotra at the mouth of the Gulf of Aden as it sailed to Al-Mukalla port.

Heavily armed pirates using speed boats operate in the Gulf of Aden where they prey on ships, sometimes holding them for weeks before releasing them for large ransoms paid by governments or ship-owners.On May 18, a Yemeni court sentenced six Somali pirates to death and jailed six others for 10 years each for seizing a Yemeni oil tanker and killing two cabin crew in April 2009.

Original story here :
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Yemeni-navy-frees-boat-crew-captured-by-pirates/Article1-550171.aspx

And also this...

More pirates rounded off Kerala coast

For the first time, Somali pirates have breached Indian waters. Three Somalis suspected to be pirates were detained in Lakshadweep on Friday (May 28). But now following a search, the Indian Navy has rounded up few more. INS Sujata reportedly spotted a boat with some Somali nationals Friday afternoon off Kerala coast. The threat definitely looms close.

With the detention of these 3 Somali nationals, the threat of piracy has moved closer to Indian shores. They strayed onto the Lakshadweep coast on this little boat only to be spotted by the locals.

The last time India was threatened was in December last year when an Indian ship M T Agrasen was attacked 300 nautical miles off the Maharashtra coast.

There have been 27 attacks by Somali pirates in the last 3 months and this one just 400 kilometers from Cochin.

The detention of these three men has exposed several lapses. Firstly, how did the suspects slip under the coast guards radar and Secondly why did they travel to India in an unmarked boat. However, one thing is clear the threat from pirates is getting too close for comfort.

Original story here :
http://www.timesnow.tv/More-pirates-rounded-off-Kerala-coast/articleshow/4346188.cms
 
STATUS OF SEIZED VESSELS AND CREWS IN SOMALIA AND THE INDIAN OCEAN -29. May 2010
Saturday, 29 May 2010 22:13
Written by Ecoterra

MSV AL BARARI: (aka AL FARARI): Seized March 29, 2010. The UAE registered but Indian-owned cargo vessel with a crew of 16 Indians was captured after leaving Mogadishu harbour and has now been freed with the crew unharmed. According to the owners, vessel and crew reached Dubai safely and have already sailed for Damman. This is the last of a series of at least 10 Indian Dhows, which were seized in 2010 and led to the ban prohibiting Indian-flagged motorized sailing vessels to sail to Somalia, where they often engage in blockade breaking and illegal exports on their return-trips.

TRENDS:

In short, the trends in piracy around the Horn of Africa are as follows:

# Though at present the highest number of vessels ever is held at the Somali coast and the UN--lead Somalia-process has completely failed and has collapsed, the international attention concerning piracy has steadily declined and the suffering of hostage-crews as well as of the Somali people in general has reached a new all time high with little or no aid coming forward.
# Increased use of sea-jacked smaller fishing vessels (often from Yemen) or dhows (often from India) to launch piracy attacks. Approaches / attacks then conducted by 2-3 small open boats with outboard engines and with 3-5 armed persons each in a concerted attack.
# Increased use of firearms on all sides. The shoot-to-kill policy adopted by several navies has led to an increased number of direct fire exchanges. The use of armed personnel and military on fishing vessels has lead to an overall increase of aggression and violence.Taking the attacked vessel and crew immediately under direct fire during a piracy attack was in earlier years unheard of, but is now common. Likewise the the treatment of crews from countries, which have killed or arrested Somalis is declining.
# Targeting larger cargo / oil / gas / chemical tankers
# Piracy-related incidents have increased in the Gulf of Aden (GOA) and far off the east coast of Somalia since the engagement of EU NAVFOR, NATO, CTFs and warships of non-aligned nations.
# Negotiations to quickly free vessels are now often hampered by restrictive orders, legal changes and ill-conceived advise given to often ignorant ship-owners.
# Except for improved defensive measures on merchant ships none of the other responses like the deployment of navies, killing or arresting Somalis as well as destroying boats and weapons, talks with proxy-leaders, training of so-called governmental forces etc. had the slightest positive impact to improve the security of maritime traffic in innocent passage and none of these measures did curb Somalia-based piracy around the Horn of Africa.
# While billions have been and are spent to finance self-serving naval exercises, pointless international conferences or are dumped into the coffers of the United Nations incl. their agencies like the IMO, no aid - whatsoever - has been set free to improve the situation for the people along the Somali coasts, which is the only solution to truly safeguard against piracy.

SOLUTIONS PENDING:

a) Imposing strictest control on foreign fishing vessels and waste-dumping ships. Compulsory installation and monitoring of all IOTC authorized fishing vessels with LRID and CCTV-monitored gear- and catch-control.
b) Development of coastal regions along the two Ocean coasts.
c) Strengthening of local institutions and regional self-governance.
d) All vessels, including naval ships must stay outside the 20nm zone of the Somali Indian Ocean coast and outside the 50%-part of the waters of the Gulf of Aden, which belongs to Somalia, unless permitted and secured approach to the three legitimate harbours Berbera, Bosasso and Mogadishu has been received. In the Somali half of the Gulf of Aden as well as in the 350nm continental shelf zone of the Indian Ocean coast of Somalia foreign research vessels have to abstain from any activity.

STATUS-SUMMARY:

Today, 29. May 2010, 12h00 UTC, still at least 24 foreign vessels plus one barge are kept in Somali hands against the will of their owners, while at least 422 seafarers - including an elderly British yachting couple - plus the lorry drivers from Somaliland suffer to be released. Request the Somali Marine & Coastal Monitor from ECOTERRA Intl. for background info and see the map of the PIRACY COASTS OF SOMALIA.

HOSTAGE CASES UNDER NEGOTIATIONS:

Genuine members of families of the abducted seafarers can call +254-733-633-733 for further details or send an e-mail in any language to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Sea-jacked British couple, Paul and Rachel Chandler, aged 60 and 58, were abducted from their 38-ft yacht S/Y LYNN RIVAL, seized October 22, 2009 en route to Tanzania, and are still held in Somalia. The yacht was recovered by the crew of UK naval vessel Waveknight, after they witnessed the transfer of the Chandlers to commandeered MV KOTA WAJAR. The yacht was brought back to England. The elderly couple is now held on land close to Harardheere, sometimes separated for fear of a commando attack . The case is turning more and more ugly with pirates becoming brutal, politicians ignorant and the financially incapable family intimidated by several sidelines, whose money-guided approach is undermining bids by local elders, human rights groups and the Somali Diaspora to get the innocent couple free. Some humanitarian efforts, however, are now under way and Somali elders, respected leaders and the Somali Diaspora have renewed their demand for an unconditional release. Latest reports from the ground say that the couple is now treated better, though they often are kept separated for fear of a military rescue attempt. The health of both elderly people is reportedly deteriorating rapidly. Relief and medicine has been sent by a humanitarian organization and was received by the couple. Repeatedly rumours were spread concerning attacks, wounding or killing one of the hostages and also about a release managed by the TFG, but they became so far not true. With former British Premier Gordon Brown gone, maybe some more rational and humanitarian minded politicians will now be the helm in the UK, who do not abandon their citizens and will extend help to solve the appalling case, though also the new government in the UK made it clear that no ransom would be paid by the British government.


MV SOCOTRA 1: Seized December 25. 2009. The vessel carrying a food cargo for a Yemeni businessman and bound for Socotra Archipelago was captured in the Gulf of Aden after it left Alshahir port in the eastern province of Hadramout. 6 crew members of Yemeni nationality were aboard. Latest information said the ship was commandeered onto the high seas between Oman and Pakistan, possibly in another piracy or smuggling mission. VESSEL STILL MISSING.

VC ASIAN GLORY: Seized January 02, 2010. The UK-flagged, UK-owned car carrier was taken around 620nm off the Somali coast in the Indian Ocean, while after leaving the South Korean port of Ulsan en route from Singapore to the Gulf of Aden and Saudi Arabia. The 25 crew members -- eight Bulgarians, including the captain, 10 Ukrainians, five Indians, two Romanians are said to be unharmed. DAYER MARITIME INC fronts as registered owners for the management company ZODIAC MARITIME AGENCIES LTD and the real owners, the Ofer Brothers - the Israeli brothers Sammy and Yehuda (Yuli) Ofer . The vessel was first held near Hobyo at the Central Somali coast. From there it was commandeered now twice out to sea to aid pirate motherships. VC ASIAN GLORY in both cases was after rescuing these pirates taken back to the Somali coast, in the first instance to Garacad, in the second to Danaane and the floating pirate base was then held 4.8nm off Hobyo again at the Central Indian Ocean coast of Somalia. though Iranian media had reported her release already, stating it transported weapons destined for Saudi Arabia. Negotiations to release the vessel seem to still have not reached a conclusion, while the vessel was commandeered again to a location a little farther off the coast near Garacad. Reports by first Iranian and then the Bulgarian media that the vessel had been released for a ransom of US5m are false and the vessel is still held while negotiation are not forthcoming. For a time the Bulgarian master was missing, but apparently just was hiding inside the huge ship. The vessel left Garacad again on 04. April being used as a piracy launch. Ship manager Zodiak confirmed the Asian Glory sailed to the east (about 580 miles) on that weekend and back to off Garacad, but did not reveal that the vessel was used in a full-fledged attack against boxship MSC ANAFI, which luckily managed to escape. The interpreter on the pirate side seems to not be able to keep proper negotiations going. MV ASIAN GLORY turns more and more into a piracy master-platform and egotiations are reportedly stuck. With the advancement of Al-Shabaab groups towards Hobyo the Asian Glory moved from the Garacad coast to a location near Kulub.

MV RIM: Seized February 02, 2010. The North-Korean-flagged, Libyan owned general cargo vessel MV RIM was captured - en route from Eritrea to presumably Yemen - in the north-western Gulf of Aden just south of the Yemeni coast on 2nd February 2009 . Though a coalition ship USS PORTER that works closely with EU NAVFOR and a helicopter from USS FARRAGUT, both of CMF CTF 151, confirmed that the RIM had been hijacked, EU NAVFOR headquarters first declined to confirm the report on 2nd to Somalia's anti-piracy envoy - only to report it then a day later.
EU NAVFOR then stated that the vessel was sea-jacked to the north of the Internationally Recommended Transit Corridor (IRTC), was not registered with MSC HOA and has had no communications with UKMTO, the British operation in Bahrain.
The relatively small coastal cargo ship of 4,800 tonnes is still listed in the ship registers as being owned by White Sea Shipping of Tripoli in Libya, while in reality it was allegedly sold now to another company for her last cargo trip with a load of clay and with a final destination at the scrapyards in India.
Her crew comprises at the moment of 10 sailors - all of Syrian nationality. An actual crew-list has now been provided. The vessel and crew are neither covered by an ITF Agreement nor an appropriate insurance.
The ship was first commandeered to the Somali Gulf of Aden coast near LasKorey where it encountered Puntland forces and the pirates exchanged fire with them. Then it sailed around the tip of the very Horn of Africa to Garacad on the Indian Ocean side.
The vessel has been moved from Garacad - because local elders protested - to Kulub, where it is held 5.3 nm off the shore at the North-Eastern Indian Ocean coast of Somalia. Negotiations between the pirates and the owners have commenced, while nosy naval vessels nearby drew in one case fire from the pirates. Numerous sidelines opened by Somali brokers make the case difficult. The captors have threatened to kill the captain if their ransom demand- reported elsewhere as $3million - is not fulfilled. If rational, the reason for the high demand for a ship which is on her last leg to the scrapyards can only be found in the cargo, which - if really only clay, as stated by the owner - also wouldn't make sense. going ahead. The crew held on the vessel now near Ilfoshe in the vicinity of Kulub is reportedly in very bad condition while it is tried to revive the stuck negotiations for the release.

SOMALILAND LORRIES: Seized February 25, 2010. Seven lorries and at least 9 persons from their driver-crews of Isaak ethnicity from Somaliland were captured by a gang of sea-shifta from Garacad in order to press their comrades free from Somaliland jails. No financial demands have been made. According to sources close to the pirates, the trucks are still being kept in small town near the pirate lair of Garacad called Kulub.

FV AL-SHURA: Seized after February 20, 2010 and most likely on 25th February with one of 9 sailors being killed by Somali pirate-attackers. Present location of Yemeni vessel and crew unknown. Navies have apparently not yet located the dhow. Allegedly the pirates now left the vessel and the dhow was returned to owner, but independent confirmation is still awaited from Yemen.

BB AL-NISR-AL-SAUDI: Seized on March 01, 2010. The relatively small bunker barge Al Nisr Al Saudi was empty when it was taken pirated in the Gulf of Aden and in the vicinity of Aden port. The captain of the ship is Greek and the nationality of the 13 other crew is Sri Lankan. All crew is believed to be safe. The 5,136 ton ship was not registered with maritime authorities and was outside the designated route that naval warships patrol. Communications between the pirates and the owner have been established. Contrary to many other vessels the families of the hostage-seafarers are very well taken care of, though the negotiations concerning the release of the vessel and crew are apparently not forthcoming. The vessel moved from Garacad and is currently held at Kulub.

FV SAKOBA: Seized after February 26, 2010, when the vessel was in Malindi / Kenya for bunkers, and according to the owner on 03 March, when the vessel was around Pemba Island in Tanzania. From there she went to her most southerly recorded point on 04 March 2010 at position 7º26.48' S, 42º29.88' E, which is between Zansibar and Mafia Island in Tanzania waters. At 07h04 UTC on 08 March 2010 Kenya-flagged FV SAKOBA was in position 00°52'N-046°56'E. The fishing vessel was used as a pirate platform and most likely also involved in the sea-jacking of UBT OCEAN.
FV SAKOBA is a fishing vessel, presently flying Kenyan flag, which has become infamous in the fish-poaching world since many years and its clandestine operations are very well known to several environmental organizations. It has a murky track record.
In 2005 FV SAKOBA, with a crew of Kenyan-Spaniards and Kenyans was involved in a serious incident, whereby a Kenyan seaman got seriously injured off the Kenyan coast. It is therefore assumed that this vessel was not necessarily sea-jacked but also operated in co-operation with the Somali sea-shifta. To be "hijacked" is a nice cover for a crooked crew to operate in criminal operations, be it illegal fishing, smuggling, trafficking or assisting in the hijacking of other vessels. In the clandestine world of vessels sailing under Flag of Convenience (FOC), FV SAKOBA is a special case. FV SAKOBA arrived late afternoon on 10 March 2010 at the Central Somali coast near Harardheere, where it is anchored now at position 4º36.88'N-48º05.64'E.
The 16 men crew consists of one Spaniard of Portuguese origin as captain, the chief engineer from Poland, ten Kenyans, two Senegalese and one sailor each from Namibia and Cape Verde. The Spanish owner of the vessel holds 99.9% of the shares in the Kenyan registered company , which exports the fish to Europe via his Spanish company. The Spanish owner is now at Nairobi in Kenya with the Spanish Ambassador and had reportedly contact with the Somali group holding the vessel. Families of the Kenyan seafarers demonstrated in Mombasa to seek support and information from the Spanish shipowner and the Kenyan government. The legal procession to hand a petition to the Kenya Maritime Authority was broken up by Kenya police, who detained one human rights activist. Meanwhile some of the Kenyan sailors on board were allowed to call home and reported shortages of clean water, food (except fish) and ship-fuel. The Spanish shipowner is back in Kenya again but was not able yet to reach an agreement with the pirates for the release. Reports of mistreatment of crew and the captain being held on land are worrisome.

MT UBT OCEAN: seized on March 05, 2010. The Marshall Islands-flagged, Norwegian owned oil-product tanker with 21 crew from Burma was captured between the Seychelles and Tanzania in the Indian Ocean while heading towards Dar es Salaam at position 04°34'S-048°09'E at 06h39 UTC (0939 LT). It was said that FV SAKOBA was somehow involved in the sea-jacking of the Norwegian tanker. However, later the position of the attack was said to have been 09°12'S-044°20'E, which seems not to be plausible. The 120 m long 9,224dwt tanker belongs to shipowners Brovigtank and is managed by Singapore-based Nautictank. The tanker had been commandeered to the coast near Harardheere at the Central Somali Indian Ocean coast, where vessel and crew are held. Negotiation for the release are said to be not forthcoming.

MV FRIGIA: Seized March 22, 2010. The Turkish owned, Malta-flagged 35,244-dwt bulker with Israeli-owned cargo of phosphate was hijacked off the Indian coast before midnight at Posn: 11:41.53N - 066:05.38E - 670nm east of Socotra Island and around 900nm from Somalia. At 0137 UTC a distress signal was sent. The vessel has a crew of 21 sailors - 19 Turks and two Ukrainians. Concerning the negotiations it is reported that not even proper contact has been established. The vessel moved from Garacad and is currently held at Kulub at the North-Eastern Indian Ocean coast of Somalia.

MV ICEBERG I: Seized March 29, 2010. The UAE-owned, Panama-flagged Ro-Ro vessel MV ICEBERG 1 with her 24 multinational crew members (from India, Pakistan, Yemen, Ghana, Sudan and one Filipino) was sea-jacked just 10nm outside Aden Port, Gulf of Aden. The vessel was mostly held off Kulub at the North-Eastern Indian Ocean coast of Somalia, while negotiations having not yet achieved a solution. The USS McFaul intercepted and identified the ship on 19th May 2010, despite the pirates having painted over her name and re-named the ship SEA EXPRESS, while the vessel was on a presumed piracy mission on the high-seas. Since about 50 pirates on the ship made any rescue operation impossible without endangering the 24 crew, the naval ship followed the commandeered vessel's movements for the next 36 hours, until it began to sail back towards the coast of Somalia.

FV JIH-CHUN TSAI 68 (日春財68號) : Seized March 31, 2010. The Taiwan-flagged and -owned fishing vessel was attacked together with sister-ship Jui Man Fa (瑞滿發), which managed to escape. The vessels are operating out of the Seychelles. The crew of Jih-chun Tsai No. 68 consists of 14 sailors - a Taiwanese captain along with two Chinese and 11 Indonesian seamen. The vessel is now held at Kulub at the North-Eastern Indian Ocean coast of Somalia and attempted negotiations face serious communication problems.

FV NN - IRANIAN FISHING VESSEL: Seized before April 02, 2010. The gang of sea-shifta, which had captured the Indian dhow MSV KRISHNA JYOT and ran out of fuel near Socotra, seized the Iranian fishing vessel and set the dhow free with her crew unharmed while going off with the Iranian fishing vessel. While the vessel had at first not come to any shore in Somalia and was believed to be used as piracy platform, some sources reported the vessel earlier from Kulub.

VLCC SAMHO DREAM: Seized April 02, 2010. The Marshall Islands-registered "Samho Dream", a 300,000t oil tanker owned by South Korea's Samho Shipping, was seized by three Somali pirates in waters some 1,500 km south-east of the Gulf of Aden at around 16:10 Seoul time (0710 GMT).There are a total of 24 crew members on board, including five South Koreans and 19 Filipinos. The 319,000 dwt very large crude carrier was on its way from Iraq to Louisiana of the United States.The Samho Dream, which was built in 2002, is carrying crude oil that could be worth as much as $170 million at current oil prices. The vessel had been commandeered to Hobyo at the Central Somali Indian Ocean coast and is now anchored 4.6nm off the beach. The South Korean government ordered their destroyer Chungmugong Yi Sun-shin out of the Somali waters and back to its working routine in the Gulf of Aden, but still there are two warships keeping a watch close by, staging mock attacks and caused tension on board, which made the pirates to issue a statement that they would blow up the oil-tanker if the harassment would not stop and no ransom would be paid. soon. Though negotiations with the owners are ongoing no conclusion has been reached. The vessel was moved from Hobyo, where she was held since her capture until the advancement of Al-Shabaab spearheaded Hizb-ul-Islam groups, to Garacad.


MV RAK AFRIKANA: Seized April 11, 2010, the general cargo vessel (IMO 8200553) with a deadweight of 7,561 tonnes (5992t gross) was captured at 06h32 approximately 280 nautical miles west of Seychelles and 480nm off Somalia in position 04:45S - 051:00E. The captured vessel flies a flag of convenience from St. Vincent and the Grenadines and has as registered owner RAK AFRICANA SHIPPING LTD based in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and an offices in the Seychelles, while industry sources say the beneficial owner is from China. AL SINDBAD SHIPPING & MARINE from Ras al Khaimah (UAE) serves as manager. While China's Seafarers Union, based on an outdated ITF database, first spoke of 23 Chinese nationals as crew, the shipowner says there are 26 seamen from India, Pakistan and Tanzania on board. The actual crew-list has not been provided yet and the crew is not covered by an ITF agreement, but it could be established that the crew comprises of 11 Indians, including the captain, the second and third officer, as well as 10 Tanzanians and 5 Pakistanis. The vessel stopped briefly due to engine problems - around 280 nautical miles (520 kilometres) west of the Seychelles - but was then commandeered to Somalia and is held now off Ceel Huur not far from Harardheere at the Central Somali Indian Ocean Coast.

YEMENI FISHING VESSELS: Two Yemeni fishing vessels were seized by presumed Somali sea-gangs during the week 09th to 16th April in the Gulf of Aden. The Yemeni coastguard did not specify the name of the vessels and only reported in one case the crew as comprising of three Yemeni nationals.

THAI FISHING FLEET: Seized April 18, 2010 with a total crew of 77 sailors, of which 12 are Thai and the others of different nationalities, the Thailand-flagged vessels operating out of Djibouti were fishing illegal in the Indian Ocean off Minicoy Island in the fishing grounds of the Maldives. All three vessels were then commandeered towards the Somali coast by a group of in total around 15 Somalis.
FV PRANTALAY 11 with a crew of 26
FV PRANTALAY 12 with a crew of 25
FV PRANTALAY 14 with a crew of 26
None of these vessels is registered and authorized by the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission to fish in the Indian Ocean.
The fleet is now held off the coast at Kulub near Garacad at the north-eastern Indian Ocean coast of Somalia. The captors already threatened to use one of the hunter-vessels of the group as a piracy-launch, but at present all three vessels are held at the coast, while negotiations have not been forthcoming.

MV VOC DAISY: Seized in the morning of April 21, 2010, the Panama-flagged, Liberian-owned bulk carrier of 47,183 dead weight tonnes, was hijacked in the Gulf of Aden, 190 nautical miles East South East of Salalah, Oman. The bulker was registered with the Maritime Security Centre Horn Of Africa (MSCHOA) and heading west from Ruwais, U.A.E, making for the eastern rendezvous point of the International Recommended Transit Corridor (IRTC), for onward transit through the Suez Canal. She was 280 miles from the IRTC when she was sea-jacked.
The vessel is owned by Middleburg Properties Ltd, Liberia, and operated by the Greek company Samartzis Maritime Enterprises. The 21 men all-Filipino crew was able to raise the alarm before the four armed pirates, carrying three AK47s and one RPG, stormed onboard and cut their lines of communication. The crew is, however, said to be all right, given the circumstances. The vessel is now held off Kulub near Garacad at the North-Eastern Indian Ocean coast of Somalia.

MV AL ASSA: Seized before May 04, 2010. The Yemeni cargo ship with nine crew members on board was captured by Somali pirates in the Gulf of Aden, Yemen's defense ministry confirmed. The vessel was captured en route from the south-eastern Yemeni port of Mukalla to Aden and is now being held at a port in northern Somalia, the Yemeni coast guards stated.

Tai Yuan 227: Seized on May 06, 2010 in an area north off the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Seychelles as it headed for the Maldives, the Taiwanese fishing boat has a crew of 28 (9 Chinese, 3 Vietnamese, 3 Filipinos, 7 Kenyans and 2 from Mozambique). Taiwan's foreign ministry confirmed that the vessel had been seized after the Taipei Rescue Command Centre reported the incident to have taken place in approximate position 0105N-06750E. The ministry added that contact was made on Friday with the pirates who made an unspecified ransom demand, while the vessel is heading towards the Somali coast. The vessel has no authorization by the Indian Ocean Commission to fish in the Indian Ocean, which, however, is partly explained by the fact that China is opposed to Taiwan as flag state. Due to the inaction of the ship-owner and the Taiwan government to free the vessel, it is at present used again as launch for further piracy attacks.

MT MARIDA MARGUERITE: Seized May 08, 2010, around120nm south of the Omani port of Salalah in the protected shipping corridor, the German owner-managed, US-owner-registered chemical tanker of 13.273 dwt has a crew of 22 seamen, including 19 Indians, two Bangladeshi and one Ukrainian. The vessel is flying a flag of convenience (FOC) from the Marshall Islands. The commandeered vessel is held at the north-eastern Somali Indian Ocean coast.

MV PANEGA: Seized late afternoon of May 11, 2010 in the Gulf of Aden in the proximity of the internationally protected shipping corridor and approximately 100 nautical miles east of Aden (Yemen), the small Bulgarian-flagged chemical products tanker of 5,848 tonnes was on route from the Red Sea to India. The crew consists of 15 Bulgarians. The vessel was already earmarked for the scrapyard and it is presumed that the P&I insurer The West of England Shipowners shall maybe be taken for a ride. The vessel is now held at the north-eastern Somali coast in the vicinity of Garacad.

MV ELENI P: Seized in the morning of May 12, 2010, the Greek-owned, Liberia-flagged 72,100 dwt bulker was sea-jacked around 380 nm south-east of Salalah (Oman) in position 15 55N 060 50E. The 23 crew comprises of 19 Filipinos, 2 Greek and one U
krainian sailor, who are said to be unharmed. Reports say that under other names the vessel had been attacked already before (as SEAHORSE on April 09, 2009). The vessel is held near Garacad at the north-eastern Somali Indian Ocean coast.

N.N.: Reported as seized on May 25, 2010, the Yemeni fishing vessel was captured five nautical miles south of the Socotra island coast. The head of the Fish Union Branch in the island Ahmed Esa said they had received a message from the three fishermen who were on board the boat describing the miracle of their survival. The fishermen said their boat was intercepted by 12 Somali pirates who had various weapons including machine guns and other dangerous arms. For his part, the owner of the boat described the incident saying: while I was on fishing along with two friends, we were surprised by a small boat approaching us. We thought the boat had a technical problem and it was asking for help but then we discovered they were Somali pirates, Ahmed Salim said. They immediately attacked our boat and aimed weapons at us, he said, adding that the pirates forced them to ride the other boat. The pirates ran away on our boat, he said. He continued saying that the boat on which the pirates came and on which we came back was also for Yemeni fishermen and hijacked by the pirates. After the pirates found it was about to break down they used it as a trap to take our own, he said.


THIS INFORMATION IS ALSO A WARNING TO VESSELS TRAVERSING THE SOMALI BASIN TO BE AWARE OF LARGER VESSELS BEING USED AS LAUNCHING PADS AND DECOY FOR PIRACY ATTACKS .
All vessels navigating in the Indian Ocean are advised to consider keeping East of 60E when routing North/South and to consider routing East of 60E and South of 10S when proceeding to and from ports in South Africa, Tanzania and Kenya.
The Indian Government has issued a NOTICE on 30th March 2010: All Indian-flagged motorized sailing vessels are - with immediate effect - no longer permitted to ply the waters south and west of a line joining Salalah (Oman) and Malé (Maldives).
NOTIFICATION BY THE INDIAN GOVERNMENT
- Issued by The Directorate General of Shipping, Mumbai.
DIRECTIONS 31. March 2010
The Directorate has issued directions prohibiting the trading of mechanized sailing vessels south and west of the line joining Salalah and Male, with immediate effect.


CASES NOT COMPLETELY CLOSED:

MS INDIAN OCEAN EXPLORER and S/Y SERENITY - presumed sunken, but wrecks not secured.

BARGE NN - an unnamed barge (allegedly with chemical waste) is held at Kulule (near Bendar-Beyla) since mid March 2009. Ownership and circumstances could not yet be clarified. In the meantime local people have developed some ailments. Community awareness campaign was carried out, barge is provisionally secured. The case needs an immediate solution.

S/Y JOUPLA (aka JUMLA or YUMLA ?) - a mysterious yacht, said to hail from the Seychelles or South-Africa, with three Africans on board was kept since a long time near Dinoowda on the Indian Ocean coast of North-Eastern Somalia. Rumors say the yacht was involved in the sea-jacking of MV NAVIOS APOLLON as well as MV JAMES PARK and was then sighted near Hobyo. The yacht, initially used to smuggle drugs, is reported now to have been wrecked during the latest spree and sunk near Dinoowda Qorioweyn. The three African men reportedly still stay in Garacad as hostages, being forced to train sea-shifta.

FV INTMAS 6 [aka FV TAWARIQ 2]: Was missing since March 2009. FV INTMAS 6 (sometimes named FV TAWARIQ 2) with a crew of around 30 seamen went missing around the time when FV TAWARIQ 1 was arrested by Tanzanian authorities with the help of the South African coastguard for illegal fishing. Families of four Kenyan crew members, who were hired by a Chinese shipping agent in Kenya, are desperate to know the fate of their relatives, while the shipping agent is now held also in the Tanzanian prisons in connection with the arrest of FV TAWARIQ 1. When FV TAWARIQ 1 was seized also FV TAWARIQ 2, 3 and 4 fled from the Western Indian Ocean. TAWARIQ 4 is now anchored in Singapore, TAWARIQ 3 caught fire off Mauritius, which has developed into a hub for fish-poachers, and TAWARIQ 2 (INTMAS 6) and her multi-national crew comprised of Taiwanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Vietnamese, Indonesians and Kenyans was missing for nearly a year. When FV WIN FAR 161 was captured by Somalis, who had followed the vessel close to the Seychelles , the other WIN FAR vessels were called back to Taiwan. The Taiwanese real shipowner of FV TAWARIQ 1, who is said to also have had his part in FV WIN FAR 161, which recently was released from Somalia with two dead sailors on board - is wanted by the authorities too. INTMAS 6 also fled from Tanzania after the arrest of FV TAWARIQ 1 - first to the Seychelles and then to Malaysia, from where now and finally all four Kenyan crew members returned to Kenya. While the vessel was reportedly sailing from Malaysia to Bangkok, her present whereabouts are unknown while investigations are ongoing.

MT AGIA BARBARA: INDIAN AND SYRIAN CREW STILL WANTED FOR MURDER - vessel escaped to the UAE from Somalia after the murder of a TFG policeman and the attempted murder of another police officer - unhindered by international naval forces. See our earlier updates for details.

FV WIN FAR 161 - The freed vessel returned under mainland China's naval escort back to Taiwan, but an independent investigation into the death of at least one Chinese and one Indonesian sailor as well as into the involvement of the ship in the attack on US-flagged container vessel MV MAERSK ALABAMA has not yet been completed, while Hsieh Long-yan, president of the ship's owner Win Far Fishery, continues to be elusive and evades questions asking e.g. why he lied to the Foreign Minister of Taiwan and why he didn't facilitate relief and medical support for the crew during many month.

M.S.V. ABDUL RAZAK: Seized before February 23, 2010 and after 17 November 2008 (latest contact). The 40m ship with 9 crew of Indian nationality was captured by Somali sea-shifta. on her way from Kandala to Dubai. No information concerning the condition of the crew available.
So far the vessel had been reported only as missing or lost at sea by the owner.
Reportedly a 7 men gang of sea-shifta from Garacad, a notorious pirate den at the Indian Ocean coast of North-Eastern Somalia, is/was commandeering the vessel.
Latest informations indicate that the vessel was already misused as pirate mother-ship far off in the Indian Ocean. An intensive search by ECOTERRA Intl. along the coast revealed that it is at present not at the Somali coasts.
Upcoming information says that it might have been involved in an encounter with a French naval vessel at the end of February 2009. It apparently sunk near the UAE and all crew are said to be dead.

1 YEMENI BOAT : Missing since 11. January 2010 from Warsha Island in Alaraj area in Yemen's province of Hudaida (not yet counted on list of pirated vessels - but mentioned here as alert). Originally two dhows had gone missing on the same day, but one - MSV AL HADRAMI 73 - was found by EU NAVFOR with the vessel abandoned and the crew missing, which apparently had left the vessel with a skiff because the engine had broken down. The vessel was towed back to Yemen and handed over to the owner on 20th February.

Legal Dispute: MV LEILA - The Panama-flagged but UAE owned Ro-Ro cargo ship of 2,292 grt with IMO NO. 7302794 and MMSI NO. 352723000 , is held at the Somaliland port of Berbera since September 15, 2009 at gunpoint and under a court order in a legal dispute between Somaliland authorities, cargo owners and the ship-owner. Somali company Omar International claims cargo damages caused by fire on MV MARIAM STAR who caught fire on the upper deck while at Berbera port in early September of 2009. MV MIRIAM STAR - a fleet-sister-ship - is likewise still at Berbera. Though difficult, all the expatriate crew could with the assistance of ECOTERRA Intl. be freed and repatriated. BOTH ABANDONED SHIPS POSE NOW A GRAVE ENVIRONMENTAL AND SAFETY HAZARD TO BERBERA PORT.

Rest of the story here :
http://australia.to/2010/index.php?...tus-of-abducted-vessels-in-somalia&Itemid=132
 
More catch and release ... Perhaps they should start tagging them with radio beacons before we release them!

Two suspected pirate attacks thwarted off Somalia

The Seychelles Coast Guard and the Australian navy separately disrupted two potential pirate attacks in the Gulf of Aden, officials said Sunday.

In the first incident, the Seychelles Coast Guard were led to the suspected pirates Saturday by a Swedish plane that is part of the European Union Naval Force.

The alleged pirate group consisted of a whaler, used as a mother ship, and two attack skiffs. The boats were first spotted about 500 nautical miles east of the Somali coast, the naval force said.

"After confirming that they had pirate paraphernalia on board, nine suspected pirates were disarmed and their two attack skiffs were destroyed," EU NAVFOR said in a statement.

"The suspected pirates were then embarked in their mother ship (whaler) and released," it added.

Authorities take suspected pirates into custody if they are caught during an attack.

In the second incident announced Sunday, the Australian navy spotted a suspicious skiff about one nautical mile from a merchant vessel.

When the navy ship Parramatta approached the skiff, it took off, the Combined Maritime Forces said in a statement.

The warship crew noticed the people in the skiff throwing items in the water, the statement said.

"When Parramatta closed in on the skiff, the suspected pirates raised their hands in surrender and a boarding team was dispatched to the vessel. Fifteen drums of fuel were found on board," the statement said.

The skiff was marked with indelible paint to allow coalition and other forces to track and identify of the skiff in the future. The suspected pirates were released.

Original story here :
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/africa/05/30/somalia.suspected.pirates/
 
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