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Somali Pirates Double Ransom Demand for Cruisers

Issue 337

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MP Challenges TGS-NOPEC And Minerals Ministry To Become Accountable And Transparent

Somaliland's High Risk Approach To Djibouti

Somaliland Kids Die In The High Seas, What Should The Diaspora Do To Stop It?

KIDNAPPED EUROPEAN COUPLE IN SANAG REGION 'SAFE'

Somaliland Foreign Policy In Djibouti Is The Right Strategy

Somaliland Youth's Death Odyssey In The Mediterranean Sea

Somaliland - The Unknown Republic

Somaliland Hopes Election Will Lead To Recognition

Attorneys File First New Habeas Petitions Following Historic Supreme Court Ruling Protecting Guantánamo Detainees

Lundin And Range Resources In Way Over Their Heads

UNICEF Ambassador, Clay Aiken, Says Organization Is Making A Difference In Somalia Despite Difficult Circumstances

The Hour Of Reckoning Is Here For The Kibaki-Raila Government

Canadian Resident 'Asparo' Killed In Somalia

Officer's Sentence For Assault Upheld On Appeal

Regional Affairs

Illegal Migration From Africa To Yemen On The Rise

UNHCR Starts Relocation Of Refugees In Kenyan Camps

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Oil producers may cut production, Libya warns

Bush Approves Additional $32 Million for Refugees

Vibrant London demonstration against George Bush attacked by police

Guilty: Men who shot dead 15-year-old with sub-machine gun after mistaking him for his brother

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Interview with Ahmed Mohamed Hassan, the former Somali Air Force pilot....

Government considering integration programme

World food aid plummets as prices of wheat and maize soar

African Officers to be Invited to Serve in New US Africa Command

World Refugee Day Event To Honor New Minnesotans' Tenacity, Generosity

Farrah Bokhari

JOURNALISTS IN EXILE

Survivors of an Ethiopian massacre 20 years ago revisited

Warriors in white coats

Food for thought

Opinions

Open letter to Somaliland Representative in USA

Your Editorial: "Djibouti’s Chickens...."

Somaliland, the world’s superlative democracy

Somaliland - Sleeping-walking into disaster

What better time to hope and work for change on the world stage?

The Upshot of the Somali Peace Express

Tribute to Omar Jama Ismail

 

 

Nairobi , July 2, 2008 – Somali pirates who seized four cruising sailors on June 23 – a German couple, their son and a French Skipper – have now upped their demands to US$2 million.

The four sailors, who had been sailing from Egypt to Thailand , are being held in a camp in the breakaway state of Somaliland . Unconfirmed reports from Africa identify the German yacht as the Rockall, the sailors as M. Sabine and K. Juergen.

Sailors have no chance against speed boats in the Gulf of Aden , which is only 75nm wide at its narrowest point. When pirates discovered the German yacht Rockall off the coast of Somalia on 23 June, an uneven race started. Two speedboats captured the sailing boat.

The pirates left the yacht near Laasgoray and retreated into the hinterland, the border area between Somaliland and Puntland. Investigators assume that the kidnappers have a camp near a place called Badnan, in which the two Germans have since been held captive, together with the skipper of the Rockall, who is French. This is no-man's-land, where clans, militias, pirates, and semi-autonomous provincial governments rule - anyone, except the state.

According to a Somali elder, while the couple is in good health and are being treated well, the man suffers from diabetes and has not had access to insulin for several days. The Somaliland elder who said he had visited the family also said he was negotiating with the pirates who had captured them.

He urged restraint from authorities in Somaliland and neighboring Somali state of Puntland who have troops massed on their border, 10km (6 miles) from where the hostages are being held.

The ruling coalition of Germany seems paralyzed by deadlocked political and constitutional argument, and there is also growing concern about the fate of the crew of a kidnapped German cargo ship, the MV Lehmann Timber. The 121-meter-long freighter of a German shipping company with a crew of 15 and a load of steel on board has been in the hands of pirates for nearly five weeks now. According to reports the several of the crew are sick, and they are short of both food and water.

Piracy became an even hotter topic than usual last month when a luxury French yacht was captured in April, but freed on payment of a ransom, after which six of the pirates were captured by French troops. Germany does not seem capable of such quick action, even though the United Nations Security Council recently approved incursions into Somali waters to curb piracy, which the weak transitional government is powerless to prevent.

By Nancy Knudsen  

Source: BBC


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