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U.S. Navy Hands Over Suspected Somali Pirates To ‎Kenya‎‎

ISSUE 212
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African Union Commission Report ‎Supports Somaliland's Case for ‎Recognition‎

5 Dead And 11 Seriously ‎Wounded In Hargeysa City ‎Urban Unrest    

Norwegian Ambassador‎ To Kenya Visits Somaliland

‎“I Urge The President Of Somaliland To ‎Disband The Local City Assembly of ‎Hargeysa Municipality” ‎‎‎‎

4 Militia Men From Majertenya Killed At Jowhar‎

Mohammad Dheere: Baidoa ‎Unfit For Parliament’s Meeting‎

Somaliland: The Capital Mayor ‎blamed for the violent clashes

Local & Regional Affairs

Somalia's 'City Of Death' Shocks ‎Speaker

US Fears Violence At Prophet Cartoon Protests In ‎Kenya‎

Djibouti Bans Danish Imports ‎After Violent Prophet Cartoon ‎Demos

Thousands Of Kenyan Muslims Protest Prophet ‎Caricatures

47 Towns In Ethiopia Get Electricity In Six ‎Months‎‎

One Killed, Seven Wounded In Somali Protest Over ‎Cartoons‎‎‎‎‎

Multi-National Force Deployed To ‎Combat Piracy Off East African Coast

U.S. Navy Hands Over Suspected Somali Pirates To ‎Kenya‎

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International News

NRC Continues Operations‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Annan Speaks Out Against Reprinting ‎Controversial Cartoons, Again Condemns ‎Violence‎‎

President’s Fiscal Year 2007 ‎Budget Gives Refugees A New ‎Opportunity

Ireland Pledges €5 Million In ‎Aid To Drought-Hit Horn Of ‎Africa‎

Shooting Of Mentally Ill Man Leads To Training

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

President Obasanjo’s AU ‎Chairmanship

For Diplomats, There's No There There‎‎

The Changing Face Of The Capital

In Destitute Djibouti, People Spend ‎Inordinate Sums On Leafy Stimulant

Notice Board

Opinions

In Your Issue 211 ''What Is Going On In ‎Somaliland?‎‎

What Is Going On In Somaliland ‎‎????‎‎‎ ‎‎‎

JNA Threatens Somaliland ‎Independence; Thus A Poisonous Pill ‎To Swallow

15 Million Dollars For Somaliland ‎Development In The National Budget Y-‎‎2006‎‎

Who Is Muhamed? ‎‎‎

Somaliland Telecom Industry At A Critical ‎Crossroads‎‎‎‎


By Somalilandtimes network


U.S. NAVY TRANSFERS SUSPECTED SOMALI PIRATES TO KENYA FOR TRIAL

Nairobi, Kenya, Jan 31, 2006 – The United States navy has handed over suspected Somali pirates it captured off the coast of Somalia after firing warning shots at their ship a week ago, in the first sign of a military crackdown on Somalia's anarchic coastal waters.

Kenyan authorities said Monday the suspects who are detained at a police station in the coastal city of Mombasa were handed over to the police on Sunday.

The authorities say the suspects who were arrested on Jan. 21 may be charged in court later Monday.

The U.S. navy said in a statement issued a week ago that a missile destroyer, the USS Winston S. Churchill, and other U.S. naval forces in the area located the pirate ship after receiving a report of a piracy attempt on Jan. 20.

After unsuccessful attempts to contact the ship, the destroyer began what the navy called "aggressive maneuvering" to stop the vessel.

The pirate ship finally stopped after the destroyer fired warning shots, and the crew effectively surrendered.

The navy says sailors discovered small arms on the ship.

So rampant is the piracy that many shipping companies resort to paying ransoms, saying they have few alternatives.

The Semlow, a ship carrying rice for emergency food aid to Somalia, was held by pirates from June to October last year. It was only released after a ransom was paid.

Pirates have carried out about 35 attacks off the Somali coast since last March.

Somalia's transitional government has signed a 50-million- dollar deal with a U.S. maritime security firm to fight piracy.

A series of pirate raids has forced relief agencies to take shipments of emergency food aid overland, raising the costs and threatening the survival

Source: Xinhua


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