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Somali pirates have captured a freighter, a bulk carrier and a chemical tanker - despite a large foreign warship presence in the Gulf of Aden. Ending 2009 with a flurry of hijackings in one of the most profitable years to date, the Somali sea bandits' latest catch on Tuesday was the St James Park - a UK-flagged chemical tanker with a crew of 26 from nine different countries. According to Andrew Mwangura of the East Africa Seafarers Assistance Programme, the vessel was seized en route from Spain to Thailand but had been commandeered near the northern Somali coast. He said the vessel's last safe port of call was Jeddah in Saudi Arabia and that the crew included seamen from Russia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania, Philippines, Poland, Georgia, India and Turkey. On Monday, Somali pirates captured a Greek-flagged bulk carrier transporting fertiliser, Mwangura said. The 52,000-tonne Navios Apollon was hijacked "en route from Tampa, Florida to Rozy, India," with a crew consisting of a Greek captain and 18 Filipinos. The ship was boarded by 10 men on speedboats in the Indian Ocean northeast of the Seychelles archipelago, according to the Greek coastguard. Third ship Earlier, pirates seized a Yemeni freighter and 15 crew members. The Al-Mahmoudia2 left the port of Aden, in Yemen, on December 18, the Yemeni authorities said on Monday, without revealing the nature of its cargo or destination. The Yemeni freighter and the UK-flagged chemical tanker were intercepted by pirates in the Gulf of Aden, key maritime bottleneck near the entrance to the Red Sea. The two attacks in the Gulf of Aden were the first since August and came as international naval missions were trumpeting the results of a year-long effort to secure the area. Expanding catchment area Since the end of the summer monsoon season allowed pirate attacks to resume three months ago, Somali pirates had abandoned the Gulf of Aden for the wide open seas of the Indian Ocean, venturing as far as the Seychelles and beyond. Despite the increased international presence off Somalia's coastline - the longest in Africa - pirates raked in huge ransoms. On Sunday, pirates said they collected $3.5 million for the release of the Chinese bulk carrier Dexinhai. The Singapore-flagged MV Kota Wajar was also released nearly 10 weeks after being hijacked, the European Union naval task force said on Monday. The amount of the ransom is not yet known. On-going ransoms The latest captures and releases bring to at least 11 the number of ships currently held by pirates, together with close to 250 seamen, according to Ecoterra International, an environmentalist NGO monitoring maritime activity in the region.
In a recent video broadcast, the pair - Paul and Rachel Chandler - said that their captors were "losing patience" and could kill them within a week if no ransom was paid. The couple were briefly held on board the recently-released MV Kota Wajar. Alongside the EU, the United States, NATO and other national navies also deployed warships off the Somali coast in December 2008 to protect vessels and secure maritime routes in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean. Thanks to state-of-the-art technology, huge budgets and ever-improving coordination, the foreign armada has thwarted many attacks and captured dozens of pirates, generally equipped with rudimentary skiffs, ladders and grapnels. But one out of four ships sailing through the danger zone still does not comply with international recommendations for safe passage, the navies say. | |||||
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Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Somali pirates hijack three ships
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