• New Horizons on Maelstrom
    Maelstrom New Horizons


    Visit our website www.piratehorizons.com to quickly find download links for the newest versions of our New Horizons mods Beyond New Horizons and Maelstrom New Horizons!

Thagarr's Pirate News!

Somali Pirates Hijack Cambodian Cargo Ship

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Somali gunmen hijacked a Cambodian cargo ship, the MV Layla-S, off Berbera after it unloaded at the port in the breakaway northern enclave of Somaliland, a regional maritime official said Thursday. "Crew members on board the ill-fated vessel are ... Pakistani, Indian, Sri Lankan, Somali and Syrian nationals," Andrew Mwangura of the Mombasa, Kenya-based East African Seafarers' Assistance Program said in a statement.

"It is said that the vessel has a link with Syrian and UAE businessmen. We are informed that she was taken by gunmen after discharging her cargo." The hijacking appeared to have happened Wednesday, but few other details were immediately available. The seizure came a week after Somali pirates freed a Greek-flagged tanker carrying 2 million barrels of oil for a record ransom.

Somaliland, which declared itself independent in 1991, is proud of its relative stability compared with the south of Somalia, where hardline Islamist rebels control large amounts of territory and are battling a weak Western-backed government.

Worldwide, piracy attacks rose by nearly 40 percent last year, with Somali gangs accounting for more than half the 406 reported incidents, the International Maritime Bureau says.

Typically, pirates from the failed Horn of Africa state hold the captured ships and crews hostage until ransoms are paid.

The International Chamber of Shipping, which represents 75 percent of the global seaborne industry, said this month that it felt deepening frustration at the international community's "impotence" in combating growing piracy in the Indian Ocean.

Original story here :
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2010/01/28/world/international-uk-somalia-piracy.html

Hmmm, seems to be a bit of a misunderstanding with this one ... then again, I am never sure if I can completely believe anything I read from the Chinese media!

Cambodian vessel not hijacked, held by Somali court: official

MOGADISHU, Jan. 30 (Xinhua) -- A Cambodian-flagged cargo ship that was reported to have been seized by Somali pirates is held by a local court in northwestern Somalia, an official statement said Saturday.

It was widely reported in local and international media that the Cambodian ship was hijacked by Somali pirates after offloading commercial goods in Berbera, a port town in the breakaway state of Somaliland.

However, the statement from the Berbera Port Authority said the local court in Berbera ordered the detention of MV Layla-S after a local businesses man filled a law suit against the company owning the ship, following the destruction of the businessman's goods in a fire on another ship of the company, MV Mairiam Star.

"On Sep. 15, 2009, the MV Layla-S was detained by Local Court of Berbera after it was accused by the merchant for goods of estimated cost of 250,000 U.S. dollars," said the statement.

The statement expressed dismay that the incident was misreported in the media and said owner of the ship was notified of the case.

Earlier on Saturday, Andrew Mwangura, a regional maritime official in Kenya, also confirmed that the hijacked Cambodian cargo ship is being held off Berbera port by businessmen owing to a deal which has gone sour and not pirate attack.

Mwangura, East Africa's Coordinator of Seafarers Assistance Program, said the MV Layla-S which was seized on Wednesday has 14 crew members on board from Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Somalia and Syria.

Piracy is rampant in the southern part of the war-torn Somalia where dozens of ships and hundreds of crew are being held for ransom by local pirate gangs.

The breakaway state of Somaliland which proclaimed its independence from the rest of Somalia 1991 enjoys relative peace and has its separate government, parliament, security forces, flag and currency although it has not received international recognition since.

Original story here :
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-01/31/c_13157380.htm
 
STATUS OF SEIZED VESSELS AND CREWS IN SOMALIA

Monday, 01 February 2010 07:23
Written by Ecoterra

Summary: Today, 31. January 2010, 18h00 UTC, at least 11 foreign vessels plus one barge are kept in Somalia against the will of their owners, while at least 250 seafarers - including an elderly British yachting couple - suffer to be released.

CASES NOT COMPLETELY CLOSED:

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

BARGE NN - an unnamed barge is held at Kulule (near Bendar-Beyla) since mid march. Ownership and circumstances not yet clarified. In the meantime local people have developed some ailments. Community awareness campaign was carried out, barge is secured.

S/Y JUMLA or YUMLA ? - a mysterious yacht with three Africans on board was kept since a long time near Dinooda.

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

Legal Dispute: MV LAYLA S - The Cambodian flagged but Syrian owned general cargo vessel of 1,404 grt with IMO NO. 7118117 and MMSI NO. 515286000, is held off the Somaliland port of Berbera since August 2009 at gunpoint in a legal dispute between Somaliland authorities, cargo owners and the ship-owner. The usually only 9 men crew, which has not been paid by UAE-based ship-manager Al-Hufoof Shipping & Forwarding since five month, consists as of today of 14 seafarers - 7 from India, 3 (incl. Captaain) from Sri Lanka, 2 from Pakistan and 2 from Somalia. "The ill-fated Cambodian flagged cargo ship MV LAYLA-S is being held hostage in port Berbera by Somali businessmen owing to a deal which has gone sour," Mwangura said by telephone from Mombasa, east Kenya. Captain and crew are desperate and plead for international assistance. The 1971 built rust-bucket is in very bad shape too and the condition of vessel and crew are deteriorating. Urgent intervention and assistance to the crew is required. ECOTERRA Intl. is providing assistance to repatriate the crew.


CASES IN NEGOTIATIONS:

FV WIN FAR 161 (aka WIN FAR NO.161 or 穩發161) - The 56 m long, 696 GRT Taiwanese fishing vessel with the registration CT7-0485 and call-sign BI-2485 was seized April 6, 2009 near the Seychelles. The tuna long-liner is said to have been observed earlier to fish illegally in Somali waters. It had after the sea-jacking been involved in the attack on MV ALABAMA. Though Taiwan foreign affairs spokesperson Henry Chen refuted the report, the vessel had been used also for further attacks. The crew of 30 (17 Filipinos, six Indonesians, five Chinese and two Taiwanese) is in awful condition. The ship's skipper and first engineer are Taiwanese nationals and the 700-ton long-liner is apparently owned by HSIEN LUNG YIN of Kaohsiung City, Taiwan and operated under the management of WIN UNI MARINE by the Taiwanese company WIN JYI FISHERY CO. LTD. (WIN FAR FISHERY GROUP/Xiamen) from KAOHSIUNG, which regularly sent their vessels into Somali waters from the Seychelles - a key transshipment point for poached tuna from the Indian Ocean to Japan. Taiwan is not a party to the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC) and their agreements and thereby feels not bound by its regulations. The Government of the Philippines finally found the manning agency, who lured the 17 Pinoy sailors into the fish-poaching operation - STEP UP MARINE from Singapore. Armed response damaged the vessel when it attacked a naval cargo ship but it could return to Garad, where it was moored.about 7 nm from the beach at the north-eastern Indian Ocean coast for a long time. She lost all her oil but it could be replaced with help from sea-jacked Theresa VIII and though limping she was able to sail again and to Hobyo and Harardheere at the Central Indian Ocean coast of Somalia. The vessel can be moored on the heavy anchor obtained from another, former sea-jack hostage - the MV Hansa Stavanger. The governments of the crew members have now stepped up their efforts to push the owner to come to terms. The crew is still in a horrible state and Selon Edward Huang, the general secretary of the Taiwanese Association of Tuna exporters went quiet. "Let's all concentrate on getting the crew of WIN FAR 161 free," commented a spokesman from ECOTERRA Intl. and added "that crew suffers at the moment the longest and the most, whereby the observing US naval vessel close by is not helping in any way to ease the plight of the sailors from five nations." The vessel is now held 5nm off Garacad and the group holding it apparently made efforts to get a new interpreter for proper negotiations. The ransom demand has been reduced significantly, but it is feared that the owner might want to abandon ship and crew to cash the insurance sum in full.

Sea-jacked British couple, Paul and Rachel Chandler, aged 58 and 55, 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 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. - updates can also be found on: http:www.//savethechandlers.com

MV AL KHALIQ: Seized on Oct. 22, 2009. The Panamanian-flagged 22,000 dwt handymax bulker MV AL KHALIQ was abducted around180 miles west of the Seychelles. The crew consists of 24 Indian sailors and two Burmese nationals. EU NAVFOR patrol aircraft confirmed the hijacking, with 6 pirates seen on board and two skiffs in tow. A third, the 'mother ship' had apparently already been winched onto the ship's deck. The vessel is managed by London-based Holbud Ship Management. The vessel with over 35,000 metric tons of wheat grain is now moored 6 miles offshore at the coast near Harardheere and the crew is on board. Negotiations are said by the ship manager to have nearly concluded. However, families are very worried.

FV THAI UNION 3: Seized on Oct. 29, 2009. Pirates on two skiffs boarded the tuna fishing boat with a crew of 27 with 23 Russians, two Filipinos and two nationals from Ghana about 200 nautical miles north of the Seychelles and 650 miles off the Somali coast. During the attack the Russian captain was shot in the left elbow. The Russian and US navies tried to provide medical aid to the captain, while the captors themselves took him to hospital, had him treated and returned him to the vessel. The fishing vessel and its crew were held just around 1.5nm from where FV ALAKRANA was held at the central Somali coast of the Indian Ocean and is held at Ga'an, north of Harardheere, south of Hobyo. Negotiations were said already earlier not to go ahead well, too many sidelines got involved and the talks have apparently have now stalled.

MV FILITSA: Seized on Nov. 10, 2009. The 1996-built, 23,709 dwt cargo-ship has a crew of 22, including three Greek officers, 18 Filipino seamen as well as one Romanian officer. The Marshall Islands-flagged ship had been heading from Kuwait to Durban in South Africa when it was attacked 513 nautical miles north-east of the Seychelles as it was sailing from Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to the port of Durban in S. Africa loaded with fertilizer. The ship belongs to the Greek company Order Shipping Co. Ltd., who has not provided the full crew-list, and is held near Hobyo/Haradheere. Negotiations have allegedly been concluded but a release operation has not yet commenced.

MV THERESA VIII: Seized on Nov. 16, 2009. The chemical tanker was hijacked in the southern Somali Basin, north-west of the Seychelles. The 22,294 dwt tanker has a crew of now only 28 North Koreans, since the captain of the tanker died from gunshot wounds sustained during the hijack. The vessel went sometimes to Garacad but then returned to Harardheere. The exact content of the vessel is not known and the case is shrouded in secrecy. Apparently a conflict has developed among pirates on board and their masterminds on land. Negotiations concluded and release operation near.

MV NESEYA : Seized Dec. 6, 2009: Indian-flagged cargo vessel with 13 sailors of Indian nationality aboard. Abducted off the coast of Kismayo in southern Somalia. The incident took place some 170 nautical miles northeast of Mombasa / Kenya. It is assumed that the vessel is at the moment used as mother ship for further pirate activities. The present location of the vessel is not known.

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 Alshahr port in the eastern province of Hadramout. 6 crew members of Yemeni nationality were aboard, in the archipelago.

MT ST JAMES PARK: Seized December 28, 2009 at position 12°58'4N-48°34'1E which is in the Gulf of Aden International Recognised Transit Corridor (IRTC), while on voyage from Tarragona, Spain to Tha Phut, Thailand. The registered owner PHILBOX Ltd. is fronting for the management company ZODIAC MARITIME AGENCIES LTD in London, while the beneficial owners are the Ofer Brothers - the Israeli brothers Sammy and Yehuda (Yuli) Ofer. There are 26 crew members on board including the Russian captain and their nationalities are: 6 Indian, 5 Bulgarian, 3 Russian, 3 Filipinos, 3 Turkish, 2 Romanian, 2 Ukrainian, 1 Polish, 1 Georgian. The ship was registred with MSC HOA and was transiting north west towards the International Recommended Transiting Corridor that she was expected to enter 3 Jan. The UK-flagged chemical tanker sent a security alert 14:20 GMT (17:20 Local Time) she also sent an unspecified distress message which was received by RCC Piraeus. The St James Park loaded at Assemini and Tarragona her cargo of 13,175 tonnes of 1,2-dichloroethane - commonly known by its old name of ethylene dichloride (EDC) and used in the manufacturing of plastics and not dangerous in normal carriage conditions. However, 1,2-dichloroethane is toxic (especially by inhalation due to its high vapour pressure), corrosive, highly flammable, and possibly carcinogenic. Its high solubility and 50-year half-life in anoxic aquifers make it a perennial pollutant and health risk that is very expensive to treat conventionally, requiring a method of bioremediation. The vessel's last port of call was Jeddah, where she stopped for Bunkers on 24th December 2009. The tanker is now held near Garacad at the North-Eastern Somali coast. Negotiations have become difficult.

MV NAVIOS APOLLON: Seized December 28, 2009. The Panama-flagged 52,000 dwt, Greek-owned bulker has 19 member crew (presumedly Greek captain and 18 Filipinos) and was captured at around 17h00 (14h00 UTC) in the Indian Ocean near the Seychelles en route from Tampa, Florida/USA to Rozy / India with a cargo of fertilizer. The vessel is held off Danaane at the North-Eastern Somali coast and negotiations started but are not serious.

MT PRAMONI: Seized January 01, 2010. The Singapore-flagged and Indonesian-owned MT PRAMONI, a chemical/oil-products tanker, was sea-jacked in the morning of the New Years day in the Gulf of Aden at position Lat 12º 30'N Long 47º 17'E while en route from Genoa, Italy eastbound.to Kandla - India. The 24 crew of the 19,998 dwt vessel consists of 17 Indonesians, 5 Chinese 1 Nigerian 1 Vietnamese and is reportedly safe. The vessel is held off Dinoowda at the North-Eastern Somali Indian Ocean coast. Negotiations have been commenced.

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 is held near Hobyo at the Central Somali coast. From there it was commandeered towards the Sychelles during the last week of January to aid and refuel a pirate mothership.

2 YEMENI BOATS: 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).

Rest of the story here :
http://australia.to/2010/index.php?...tus-of-abducted-vessels-in-somalia&Itemid=132
 
Somali pirates free Greek ship


Greek officials say Somali pirates have freed a Greek-owned cargo ship and its 22-member crew after receiving a ransom payment.

A coast guard statement said the Filitsa, which had been held since November, was freed Monday along with its crew - three Greeks, 18 Filipinos and a Romanian.

Officials said the crew members are in good health.

The ship's owner, Order Shipping, confirmed that a ransom had been paid but refused to declare the sum.

The Marshall Islands-flagged vessel was seized on November 11 in the Gulf of Aden.

Pirates can often command multimillion-dollar ransoms for the release of the vessels they capture, a fortune in impoverished Somalia, which has not had a functioning government for a generation.

Somali pirates seized 47 vessels last year and are holding about 200 crew members hostage.

Original story here :
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5hiaOadQRc7J4n3_5-vv5dqg-OAvw
 
Somali pirates abandon hijacked Indian dhow and crew, board another hijacked vessel

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (CP)

NAIROBI, Kenya — The European Union's anti-piracy force says Somali pirates have abandoned an Indian-flagged dhow they had held for more than two weeks.

The EU naval force says the pirates left the Faize Osamani late Monday. They immediately boarded another ship held by fellow pirates, the British-flagged Asian Glory.

Somali pirates have been known to give up on ships they believe have no ransom value, such as vessels owned or hired by Somali traders.

The force says a coalition force ship provided medical and technical assistance to the 14-member crew of Faize Osamani before the dhow sailed to the Somali capital, Mogadishu, with its cargo of rice.

Somali pirates are currently holding several vessels and their crew hostage.

Original story here :
http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5jdWQmBhIk4uoRX1Q77y0FAhgWXPA
 
Nice stories! I didn't realize they were that active.
The one with the cutlasses gave me a good laugh, nice to see the old ways are still working fine :))
 
Thanks Chris, glad you enjoyed them mate! Yeah, I thought that first one was pretty appropriate being as it happened in the Caribbean and they used cutlasses ...now if there had only been a few cannon volley's as well! :woot

The situation in Somalia on the other hand is a real mess, and it's only going to get worse this year. The weather has once again slowed things down for a bit, but as long as government and shipping company's are willing to keep paying blood money instead of actually doing something about piracy in the region, things will just pick up again when the weather clears a bit.
 
Turkey extends anti-piracy mission off Somalia
By Associated Press
Tuesday, February 2,


ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey’s parliament is extending for another year the authority to deploy navy ships helping a NATO mission fight piracy along Somalia’s vast and lawless coastline.

Tuesday’s decision comes a day after Turkey sent a new frigate, the TCG Gemlik, to join the NATO anti-piracy mission. Turkish warships joined the NATO mission a year ago and have repelled seven attacks, raiding pirate skiffs and capturing dozens of pirates.

Somali pirates seized 47 vessels last year. They currently hold about 200 crew members hostage.

Piracy experts say most of the hijacked ships ignored safety precautions.

Original story here :
http://news.bostonherald.com/news/i...mission_off_somalia/srvc=home&position=recent
 
Somali pirates hijack Libyan cargo ship
Thu Feb 4, 2010 2:42am EST

NAIROBI, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Somali pirates in the Gulf of Aden have hijacked a Libyan-owned cargo ship thought to be carrying 17 seafarers from Romania and Libya, a European Union anti-piracy force and a maritime group said on Thursday.

The number of piracy attacks worldwide leapt almost 40 percent last year, with gunmen from the failed Horn of Africa state accounting for more than half the 406 reported incidents, according to the International Maritime Bureau.

Kenya-based Ecoterra, which monitors shipping off Somalia, said the 4,800-tonne MV Rim was seized on Tuesday in the strategic channel south of Yemen. It said it was flying a North Korean flag, but was owned by White Sea Shipping of Tripoli.

"Her crew usually comprises 17 sailors and, based on outdated crew lists, it could be assumed that they are holding Romanian and Libyan nationalities," Ecoterra said.

The group said local reports suggested the hijackers were from Somalia's semi-autonomous northern region of Puntland.

"It is assumed the vessel is now commandeered to one of the Puntland pirate lairs," it said in a statement.

A European Union counter-piracy force said a coalition ship, the USS Porter, and a helicopter from the USS Farragut confirmed the hijacking, but had no details on the make-up of the crew.

"The MV Rim ... has now altered course and is heading towards the Somali Basin. Coalition forces will now monitor the situation," EU Navfor said in a statement.

Typically, the heavily armed Somali pirates hold captured ships and their crews hostage until ransoms are paid.

Rest of the story here :
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLDE61300W
 

Nato troops free ship off Somalia after pirate attack



Danish special forces serving as part of Nato's counter-piracy operation have freed the crew of a cargo ship boarded by pirates off Somalia.

They moved in after being assured by the captain that the crew had locked themselves in a safe room, a Nato spokeswoman told the BBC.

It seems the pirates escaped to their boat before the troops arrived but the 180m (590ft) vessel was being searched.

A second pirate boat in the area was seized by a Russian warship, Nato says.

Admiral Sir Trevor Soar, commander of the Nato Maritime HQ in London, commended the actions of the Danish warship Absalon, which carried out the rescue.

"Absalon's action today demonstrates Nato's resolve to deter and disrupt piracy off the Horn of Africa," he said in a statement.

He also thanked the Russian and Indian navies for assisting in the operation.

Distress signal

A distress signal was received from the master of the Antigua and Barbuda-flagged Ariella on Friday morning, reporting that six heavily armed pirates had boarded the ship, Nato spokeswoman Lt Cdr Jacqui Sherriff told the BBC.

The attackers' skiff and a second boat were seen in the area of the attack about 160km (100m) off the Somalia coast.

Informed that the crew had managed to lock themselves away, the Absalon first sent out a helicopter to investigate, then a team of specially trained forces in inflatable dinghies to board the ship and regain control.

The crew, said to be 25 strong, were released safely.

Cmdr Dan B Termansen, commander of the Absalon, said that the crew had reported seeing a pirate firing an automatic weapon aboard their ship.

"I don't know if he jumped overboard when he saw the helicopter or later when he saw the special forces," he added.

"We searched the ship for hours and didn't find anybody."

Rest of the story here :
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8500611.stm
 
Russian warship seizes group of pirates off Somalia

A Russian frigate, the Neustrashimy (Fearless), seized on Saturday a boat with seven pirates on board during an operation to thwart an attack on a cargo ship in the Gulf of Aden, a Russian Navy spokesman said.

Slovenia's Ariella vessel with a crew of 15 nationals of the Philippines, seven Ukrainians, a Slovenian, a Bulgarian and an Indian, was en route from the Black Sea port of Sevastopol to Indonesia when it gave a distress call early on Friday.

"The Neustrashimy is currently escorting the Ariella vessel eastwards. After having been convoyed off, the Ariella will resume its route to the port of destination on its own," the naval source said.

The fate of the captured pirates is unclear. They could either be prosecuted by Russia, or handed for prosecution to other states, namely Slovenia, which owns the Ariella, or Somalia's neighboring states, such as Kenya or the Seychelles.

The Russian Navy has maintained a constant presence off the Horn of Africa, with each fleet dispatching warships on a rotational basis. Russia joined international anti-piracy efforts off Somalia in October 2008.

MOSCOW, February 6 (RIA Novosti)

Original story here :
http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100206/157792606.html
 
Somali pirates free Indian-operated ship

MOGADISHU — Somali pirates said Tuesday they have released a Panamanian-flagged ship and its mostly Indian crew of 26 after receiving a ransom of 3.1 million dollars.

"The ship was freed this afternoon after 3.1 million US dollars were paid to the pirates who had been holding it for a long time," Mohamed Ilkase, a pirate leader, told AFP by phone.

The Al Khaliq bulk carrier was hijacked on October 22 around 180 nautical miles from Seychelles in the Indian Ocean.

The European Union naval mission in the region confirmed that the vessel had been release after a ransom was paid, and that its help had not been requested. No further details were provided.

"The ship is still here but the pirates have already deserted it and have come back to shore with their ransom money," said Ilkase, speaking from the main pirate lair of Harardhere, north of the capital Mogadishu.

Other sources confirmed that the ship was free.

"The pirates released this ship they had been holding near Harardhere. I heard they took more than three million dollars in ransom," said Moalim Abdullahi Diriye, a local elder.

A fisherman said he saw some of the pirates returning ashore from the ship with bags of cash.

"The pirates had been holding that ship near Hundule and I saw them coming ashore, they were carrying bags of money in their speedboats," said Hussein Shugle.

The Al Khaliq's crew consists of 24 Indians and two Burmese nationals.

The release of the 22,000-tonne bulk carrier reduces to 11 the number of foreign vessels still held by Somali pirates, together with more than 200 crew members.

The vessel -- seized within hours of the capture of British couple Paul and Rachel Chandler -- was one of the longest-running hijacking cases.

The only remaining vessel to have been held longer is the FV Win Far 161, a Taiwanese fishing vessel which has a crew of 30 from various Asian nationalities and was seized in April last year.

The town of Harardhere is currently awash with cash following the release of several ships in exchange for large ransoms, including seven million dollars air-dropped to free a 330-metre-long Greek supertanker last month.

According to some studies, Somalia's rag-tag army of sea bandits raked in at least 60 million dollars in ransom payments in 2009.

Original story here :
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5h8ZPqFZOtBOdptOipOtmR3uzie5A
 
Somali Pirates Free Taiwan Boat and Crew

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: February 11, 2010

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) -- Taiwan says Somali pirates have freed a Taiwanese fishing boat and all of its crew held since April after the boat owner paid a ransom.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Henry Chen says the Win Far 161 was released Thursday and the boat and its crew are on their way home. He did not say how many crew were on board and how much ransom was paid.

Win Far 161 was seized last April near an island in the Seychelles, more than 700 miles (1,100 kilometers) off the coast of Somalia.

Somali pirates now hold at least seven ships and more than 160 crew members. Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991.

Original story here :
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2010/02/11/world/AP-Piracy.html
 
Somali pirates get 15-year sentences: officials


MOGADISHU — A court in Somalia handed out 15-year prison sentences to 11 pirates on Sunday, the presiding judge said.

Prosecutors at the court in Berbera, in the breakaway northern state of Somaliland, brought a number of charges against the men, including piracy and attempted armed kidnapping.

They showed the court photos obtained from NATO naval forces showing the pirates when they were arrested last December.

"The trial, which lasted a week, was finally concluded today after the evidence brought before the court showed that the eleven were involved in piracy and hijacking. The court finally announced its verdict -- a jail term of 15 years each", Osman Ibrahim Dahir, the presiding judge, told AFP by phone from Berbera.

The pirates were detained last December after they attacked an international naval force ship mistaking it for a commercial ship off the Somali coast.

The international forces released them after disarming them, but they were arrested against a few days later by Somaliland coastguards who spotted them in a coastal village near Djibouti.

"Some of the pirates confessed their crimes while others were still reluctant to confess, but they were sentenced and sent to jail," Jamal Abdikarin, security officer in Berbera told AFP by phone.

Original story here :
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hFjWiUr0Gp99JlIapnqijVrF-ukQ
 
I wonder how long they'll actually be locked away - half the people in jail here are usually out before having served half their sentence, regardless of what they're in for. I was hoping the Somalis would still make use of good ol'necktie parties, but I guess not. xD:
 
Aye, that's a good question mate! Personally, I think it was just a "show trial", it looks to me like they were just trying them more for being stupid enough to try and hijack a warship then for being pirates! :urgh
 
I guess we pirates all have our stupid days, eh? xD: That's like me attacking a Man O'War with my trusty Lugger - it's guaranteed from the get go not to go right. :cheeky
 
Good point Stallion! xD:

11 Indonesian crew saved after pirate ordeal

Kota Kinabalu: Eleven Indonesian crewmen who had been afloat at sea for at least 11 days after their tugboat was seized by pirates in Tioman Island waters were rescued near Station Uniform, close to Layang-Layang Island, Wednesday.

Navy personnel stationed at the offshore security outpost spotted the Indonesian workers in a raft adrift at sea and immediately sent out a patrol boat to pull in the visibly exhausted men at about 9.20am.

The men, aged between 22 and 49, had set sail for Cambodia from Singapore on the Singapore-registered vessel, Asta, on Feb. 4 but ran into the sea robbers two days later in Tioman waters, off Pahang.

Region 2 Naval Commander, First Admiral Datuk Anuwi Hassan who described the pirates as sea robbers said they took the tugboat and ditched the workers in the raft but kidnapped the crew's chief engineer, identified as Albin Osman.

"They have been at sea for the past 11 days after the robbers took their tugboat. The rescued men are in good condition. We have, nevertheless, provided medical assistance as well as food to them," he said, in a telephone interview.

He said the Indonesians were enroute to Cambodia to pick up sand supplies to bring back to Singapore.

Towards this end, the navy will make arrangements to ferry the men here on Thursday morning, Anuwi said, adding the crew would be handed over to the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency and the police to facilitate investigations into the incident.

In 2008, the International Maritime Bureau issued a warning to all ships passing through the South China Sea off Tioman Island following several attacks by pirates armed with guns and machetes.

Original story here :
http://www.dailyexpress.com.my/news.cfm?NewsID=70805
 
Sorry I haven't been keeping this and my blog as up to date as usual mates, I've been working a lot of overtime the past few weeks, 60+ hours doesn't leave a whole lot of free time. I'm still keeping an eye on things though, hopefully things will slow down a bit in the next couple of weeks and I can be here a bit more often.

U.S. Navy rescues Tanzanian ship, nabs 8 pirates

NAIROBI (Reuters) - A U.S. Navy warship prevented an attack on a Tanzanian ship and apprehended eight suspected pirates in the process, the U.S. Embassy in Tanzania said on Tuesday.

USS Farragut dispatched an SH-60B Seahawk helicopter to MV Barakaale 1 after it raised a distress call saying it was under attack from a gang on a skiff, the embassy said in a statement.

"The helicopter then stopped the ... skiff as it attempted to speed away, by firing warning shots across its bow," it said.

"A boarding team from USS Farragut boarded the vessel and the eight suspected pirates were taken aboard the Farragut."

The statement did not say when and where the incident occurred, nor give the pirates' nationalities. The USS Farragut is a guided missile destroyer and part of Combined Task Force 151 that patrols the Gulf of Aden and the east coast of Somalia.

The task force, formed in 2009, comprises about three dozen ships from Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Pakistan, Canada, Denmark, Turkey, United States and United Kingdom among other countries.

The coast off Somalia is among the world's most dangerous shipping lanes.

The number of piracy attacks worldwide jumped by 40 percent last year, with gunmen from the failed Horn of Africa state accounting for more than half the 406 reported incidents, according to the International Maritime Bureau.

Original story here :
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE61M2B620100223
 

STATUS OF SEIZED VESSELS AND CREWS IN SOMALIA AND THE INDIAN OCEAN

Wednesday, 24 February 2010 09:56
Written by Ecoterra


Summary: Today, 24. February 2010, 06h00 UTC, still at least 8 foreign vessels plus one barge are kept in Somalia against the will of their owners, while at least 174 seafarers - including an elderly British yachting couple - suffer to be released. See the Somali Marine & Coastal Monitor for background info.

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. 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.

S/Y JUMLA or YUMLA ? - a mysterious yacht with three Africans on board was/is kept since a long time near Dinooda.

FV INTMAS 6 [aka FV TAWARIQ 2]: 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 is still missing. 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 some dead bodies on board - is wanted by the authorities too.

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

2 YEMENI BOATS: 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).

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-sistership - is likewise still at Berbera, but without crew.
The roll-on-roll-off vessel MV LEILA is owned by AL ALEELY GMGH in Dubai. The crew has not been paid by UAE-based ship-manager Al-Hufoof Shipping & Forwarding since five month and consists of 14 seafarers - 7 from India, 3 (incl. Captain) from Sri Lanka, 2 from Pakistan and 2 from Somalia. The crew and vessel are not covered by an ITF Agreement.
"The crew of ill-fated ro-ro ship MV LEILA is being held hostage at the port of Berbera by Somali businessmen owing to a deal which has gone sour . Captain and crew are desperate and pleaded for international assistance ," Andrew Mwangura of the East African Seafarer's Assistance Programme confirmed by telephone from Mombasa, Kenya. The 1973 built rust-bucket is apparently in a very bad shape too and the condition of vessel and crew are deteriorating. The crew asked for urgent international intervention and assistance. ECOTERRA Intl. is giving assistance to provide relief and ensure the safe repatriation of the crew. The crew had run out of food and one crew member had to be taken already to Hargeisa for medical treatment. The harbour master of Berbera was helpful, but the court order to hold the ship still stands, though port manager and owner say the official letter would arrive soon that the vessel is free. Meanwhile the diplomatic missions of India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan have also been involved and are active to solve the case with the Indian High Commission being the most proactive, having provided tickets for the crew already. The crew has received provisions as aid but it is hoped that a breakthrough will be achieved by the diplomatic missions with the ship-owner to pay the over six month of salaries and to repatriate all the crew. The Somali authorities have indirectly impounded the crew, despite that they say they had not. But what do you call a situation when the Port Manager says you are free, but you are not allowed to leave the harbour, because he is obviously colluding with the shipowner, though all the crew have resigned and only want to go home with their rightful dues. They feel that the pirates treat the other crews on the vessels they hold better.

WANTED: FV WIN FAR 161: The vessel was released by her Somali captors, but it has now also been confirmed by third party that at least two dead sailors are carried on board, which heads now towards Taiwan. Based on orders from the owner the vessel dodged all concerned parties by not relieving and exchanging crew and not stopping in Port St Louis for refuelling and repairs.The owner of the vessel irresponsibly endangers the distressed crew, which just came out of the ordeal of being held in Somalia for over ten month by pushing the damaged vessel through he high seas. The Chinese Navy, which did provide assistance to WIN FAR 161 is obviously is colluding in the attempt to cover up and thereby also proves that it can not take a responsible role in the anti-piracy phalanx. The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation also wants the original crew of WIN FAR 161 for questioning in connection with the piracy attack against MV MAERSK ALABAMA.


CASES IN 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 58 and 55, 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.

FV THAI UNION 3: Seized on Oct. 29, 2009. Pirates on two skiffs boarded the tuna fishing boat with a crew of 27 with 23 Russians, two Filipinos and two nationals from Ghana about 200 nautical miles north of the Seychelles and 650 miles off the Somali coast. During the attack the Russian captain was shot in the left elbow. The Russian and US navies tried to provide medical aid to the captain, while the captors themselves took him to hospital, had him treated and returned him to the vessel. The fishing vessel and its crew were held just around 1.5nm from where FV ALAKRANA was held at the central Somali coast of the Indian Ocean and is held at Ga'an, north of Harardheere, south of Hobyo. Negotiations were said already earlier not to go ahead well, too many sidelines got involved and the talks had stalled. Meanwhile the families in Russia protested openly about the slow progress of the negotiations. Though vessel owner and pirates are still too far apart to come to a conclusion and would need mediation, the talks have reportedly resumed. The condition of the captain, who had been injured earlier, has reportedly deteriorated and local reports say that the crew has run out of food (except fish) and clean water.

MV THERESA VIII: Seized on Nov. 16, 2009. The chemical tanker was hijacked in the southern Somali Basin, north-west of the Seychelles. The 22,294 dwt tanker has a crew of now only 28 North Koreans, since the captain of the tanker died from gunshot wounds sustained during the hijack. The vessel went sometimes to Garacad but then returned to Harardheere. The exact main content of the vessel as well as of some additional cargo is not known and the case is shrouded in secrecy. Apparently a conflict had also developed among pirates on board and their masterminds on land. Though several times it was said that the negotiations had concluded and release operations were said to be near, a real end is not in sight yet.

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 Alshahr port in the eastern province of Hadramout. 6 crew members of Yemeni nationality were aboard, in the archipelago. Latest information said the ship was commandeered onto the high seas between Oman and Pakistan, possibly in another piracy or smuggling mission.

MT ST JAMES PARK: Seized December 28, 2009 at position 12°58'4N-48°34'1E which is in the Gulf of Aden International Recognised Transit Corridor (IRTC), while on voyage from Tarragona, Spain to Tha Phut, Thailand. The registered owner PHILBOX Ltd. is fronting for the management company ZODIAC MARITIME AGENCIES LTD in London, while the beneficial owners are the Ofer Brothers - the Israeli brothers Sammy and Yehuda (Yuli) Ofer . There are 26 crew members on board including the Russian captain and their nationalities are: 6 Indian, 5 Bulgarian, 3 Russian, 3 Filipinos, 3 Turkish, 2 Romanian, 2 Ukrainian, 1 Polish, 1 Georgian. The ship was registred with MSC HOA and was transiting north west towards the International Recommended Transiting Corridor that she was expected to enter 3 Jan. The UK-flagged chemical tanker sent a security alert 14:20 GMT (17:20 Local Time) she also sent an unspecified distress message which was received by RCC Piraeus. The St James Park loaded at Assemini and Tarragona her cargo of 13,175 tonnes of 1,2-dichloroethane - commonly known by its old name of ethylene dichloride (EDC) and used in the manufacturing of plastics and not dangerous in normal carriage conditions. However, 1,2-dichloroethane is toxic (especially by inhalation due to its high vapour pressure), corrosive, highly flammable, and possibly carcinogenic. Its high solubility and 50-year half-life in anoxic aquifers make it a perennial pollutant and health risk that is very expensive to treat conventionally, requiring a method of bioremediation. The vessel's last port of call was Jeddah, where she stopped for Bunkers on 24th December 2009. The tanker was held near Garacad at the North-Eastern Somali coast. During the night of 16./17. February a naval vessel came close and provoked heavy gun-fire from the pirates of MV ST JAMES PARK as well as from neighbouring MV RIM. After the incident, in which the naval vessel didn't return fire and left, MV ST JAMES PARK changed position and is now held off Kulub. Negotiations are said to have started in earnest.

MV NAVIOS APOLLON: Seized December 28, 2009. The Panama-flagged 52,000 dwt, Greek-owned bulker has 19 member crew (presumedly Greek captain and 18 Filipinos) and was captured at around 17h00 (14h00 UTC) in the Indian Ocean near the Seychelles en route from Tampa, Florida/USA to Rozy / India with a cargo of fertilizer. The vessel is held off Danaane at the North-Eastern Somali coast and negotiations started but are reported as not yet concluded.

MT PRAMONI: Seized January 01, 2010. The Singapore-flagged and Indonesian-owned MT PRAMONI, a chemical/oil-products tanker, was sea-jacked in the morning of the New Years day in the Gulf of Aden at position Lat 12º 30'N Long 47º 17'E while en route from Genoa, Italy eastbound.to Kandla - India. The 24 crew of the 19,998 dwt vessel consists of 17 Indonesians, 5 Chinese 1 Nigerian 1 Vietnamese and is reportedly safe. The vessel with it load of fertilizer is held off Dinoowda at the North-Eastern Somali Indian Ocean coast. Some negotiations have continued, but a serious conflict among the captors themselves has not yet been resolved.

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 is now held off Garacad again at the North-Eastern Indian Ocean coast of Somalia. Negotiations to release the vessel seem to be still not forthcoming, though Iranian media had reported her release already, stating it transported weapons destined for Saudi Arabia.

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 and is in the process to be verified. 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 5.5 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.

~ * ~

With the latest captures and releases now still at least 8 seized foreign vessels (9 sea-related hostage cases since yacht SY LYNN RIVAL was abandoned and taken by the British Navy) with a total of not less than 174 crew members (incl. 23 Filipinos onboard three vessels: two onboard the Thai Union 3, three onboard the MV St. James Park and 18 onboard the MV Navios Apollon; as well as the British sailing couple) are accounted for. The cases are monitored on our actual case-list, while several other cases of ships, which were observed off the coast of Somalia and have been reported or had reportedly disappeared without trace or information, are still being followed too. Over 134 incidences (including attempted attacks, averted attacks and successful sea-jackings) had been recorded for 2008 with 49 fully documented, factual sea-jacking cases for Somalia and the mistaken sinking of one sea-jacked fishing vessel and killing of her crew by the Indian naval force. For 2009 the account closed with 228 incidences (incl. averted or abandoned attacks) with 68 vessels seized for different reasons on the Somali/Yemeni captor side as well as at least TWELVE wrongful attacks (incl. one friendly fire incident) on the side of the naval forces.
For 2010 the recorded account stands at 15 attacks and 3 sea-jackings.
The naval alliances had since August 2008 and until January 2010 apprehended 666 suspected pirates, detained and kept or transferred for prosecution 367, killed 47 and wounded 22 Somalis. (New independent update see: http://bruxelles2.over-blog.com/pages/_Bilan_antipiraterie_Atalanta_CTF_Otan_Russie_Exclusif-1169128.html).
Not fully documented cases of absconded vessels are not listed in the sea-jack count until clarification. Several other vessels with unclear fate (although not in the actual count), who were reported missing over the last ten years in this area, are still kept on our watch-list, though in some cases it is presumed that they sunk due to bad weather or being unfit to sail - like the S/Y Serenity, MV Indian Ocean Explorer.Present multi-factorial risk assessment code: GoA: ORANGE / IO: ORANGE (Red = Very much likely, high season; Orange = Reduced risk, but very likely, Yellow = significantly reduced risk, but still likely, Blue = possible, Green = unlikely). Piracy incidents usually degrade during the monsoon season and rise gradually by the end of the monsoon. Starting from mid February until early April every year an increase in piracy cases can be expected.
For further details and regional information see the Somali Marine and Coastal Monitor at www.australia.to
ECOTERRA International monitors illegal maritime activity and piracy around the Horn of Africa

Original story here :
http://australia.to/2010/index.php?...n-ocean&catid=70:piracy-in-somalia&Itemid=142
 
Back
Top