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New Ship Hijacked In Somali Waters

ISSUE 203
Front Page
Index

Headlines

Foreigners Among Extremists Receiving ‎Training In Mogadishu's Terrorist Camps

President Rayale To Leave For Germany Today

Guurti Endorses Election Of ‎Opposition-Backed Speaker

Businesses Fear Monopoly May Loom over ‎Port Operation

THE BIG SCAM TFG Somalia And The Topcat Marine Sandal‎

The Surud Mountain Forests In Somaliland

Brazil Will Face Croatia In Opener Of ‎The 2006 World Cup Finals In Germany‎‎

IGAD And Its Patient

Local & Regional Affairs

Elders Urge Compromise In Parliamentary Rifta

Somaliland, Puntland Exchange Detainee

UN Urges Due Process In Murder Investigation

SOMALIA: Leaders Appeal For Food Aid Following ‎Crop Failure‎

Moi Must Go, They Said; Wait And See, He Replied‎

Infrastructure: Horn of Africa‎‎‎

Journalists’ Union Receives Press Freedom Award‎

Mercenaries To Police Somali Coast

Editorial
Images of Tuesday the 29th of November 2005

International News

Commons To Investigate Impact Of Piracy On UK

Police Shooting Suspects May Flee UK

New Ship Hijacked In Somali Waters

Border Abuses Of Children Must Stop

High Commissioner For Human Rights Says Total ‎Ban On Torture Under Attack In 'War On Terror'

Somali Man Celebrates New Post

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Land Tenure: Addressing Territorial Disputes ‎Somaliland

Chinese Influence On African Media

The Isaq Somali Diaspora And‎ Poll-Tax Agitation In Kenya, 1936-41 ‎(part 4)

Nazlin Umar Is A Bridge Over Troubled Waters

Notice Board

A SOMALI PLAGIARIST WRITER‎

Opinions

The Cause Of Underdevelopment Of Somaliland

Well Done Mr. Rayale‎

The Mother Of All Monkey Business!‎‎‎

Somaliland Is Better To Be Alone, Than ‎In The Wrong Union‎

Bashir Ahmed Warsame: A Gift To Be Cherished‎

Somaliland Can Ill-Afford The Mistakes Of Its Leaders‎

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Moscow , RU, Dec 06, 2005 (Pravda) – An unidentified merchant vessel has been reported hijacked by gunmen in the pirate-infested waters off Somalia in what is feared to be the latest in a surge of attacks on commercial shipping there, according to a maritime official.

If confirmed, the hijacking would bring to at least five the number of ships in the same area currently in the hands of pirates and would be the 33rd attack on ships in and around Somali waters since mid-March.

Andrew Mwangura of the Kenyan chapter of the Seafarers' Assistance Programme (SAP) said his organization had been informed that a ship of unknown ownership and registry was seized early Tuesday.

"We were called by traders who frequent the Mogadishu-Mombasa route and informed that a new merchant ship has been hijacked off northeastern Somalia ," Mwangura told.

He said the reports indicated the vessel was taken near the Somali town of Haradere , the base of pirates blamed for the spate of attacks that have prompted dire warnings to avoid the coast and calls for foreign intervention.

Until Tuesday, the International Maritime Board (IMB) had recorded 32 such incidents in the area since March 15, including a November 5 attack on a US-owned luxury ocean liner and two UN-chartered freighters carrying food aid.

In the past two weeks, Somali pirates have freed a hijacked Kenyan-owned cargo ship, the MV Torgelow, and its 10-man crew and Ukrainian vessel, the MV Panagia, and its crew of 22, both of which were seized in October.

Before Tuesday's reported incident, Somali pirates continued to hold at least four hijacked vessels, including the Thai-owned MV Laemthong Glory, and its unknown number of crew and three Taiwanese fishing boats with 48 sailors, the AFP reports.


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