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Q. & A. With A Pirate: “We Just Want The Money”

Issue 350
Front Page
Index
News Headlines
USAID   Announces New   Emergency Food Aid   Contribution to   Somalia
Local and Regional Affairs
Russia Wants To Work With EU , US , Against Piracy: Report
Ukraine Denies Sending Arms To Georgia During War
Hijacked Ship Linked To Sudan
Africa Command Is Operational, But Skepticism Persists
IMF Extends 20-Million-Dollar Loan To Djibouti
Kenyan Official Arrested In Connection With Hijacked Ship
EU Set To Send Joint Naval Force To Somalia
Pirate Standoff To End In Tears, Scuttling
Somali Islamists Warn Western Aid Agencies
Maritime Community Asks Russia Not To Use Force Against Somali Pirates
Editorial
 
President Guelleh's Message To Somaliland
We Must First Secure Somalia To Make The Waters Safe
Q. & A. With A Pirate: “We Just Want The Money”
The World's Most Utterly Failed State
On Maternal Mortality, Why Africa Falls So Far Behind
Time To Rethink The War Against Terror
Piracy in Somalia : Threatening Global Trade, Feeding Local Wars
International News
A Spirited Debate Between Biden And Palin
KULMIYE Statement On The Horn Of Africa
Features & Commentry
Shelterbox Offers Hope When Disaster Strikes
Somali Pirates Release Japanese Ship
Somali Pirates Turn Route to Suez Into `Most Dangerous' Waters
Kulmiye Leadership Should Quit Or Face History's Cruel Verdict
Challenges Await Next US President
He Had Trust Issues

Opinion

Somaliland: The World Arms Pirates While It Disarms Somaliland Navy
Today's Capitalism Has Run Its Course
The New World War - The Silence Is A Lie
Where Are Somalis From This?!
Ruth Shanor's Reflections: Sarah Palin And The Renewed Hoopla About Feminism

 

Somali pirates in small boats hijacked the Faina, a Belize-flagged cargo ship owned and operated by Kaalbye Shipping Ukraine, on Sept. 25.

By Jeffrey Gettleman

Harar-Dheere, September 30, 2008 – Sugule Ali, the spokesman for the Somali pirates holding hostage the Faina, a Ukrainian freighter loaded with weapons, spoke to me by satellite telephone today from the bridge of the seized ship. In the holds of the Faina, which the pirates seized on Thursday, are 33 Russian-built battle tanks and crates of grenade launchers, anti-aircraft guns, ammunition and other explosives. American officials fear that the weapons could fall into the hands of radical Islamist insurgents who are battling Somalia 's weak government. My questions were translated into Somali, and Mr. Ali's responses into English, by a translator employed by The New York Times.

Q. Tell us how you discovered the weapons on board.

A. As soon as we get on a ship, we normally do what is called a control. We search everything. That's how we found the weapons. Tanks, anti-aircraft, artillery. That's all we will say right now.

Q. Were you surprised?

A. No, we weren't surprised. We know everything goes through the sea. We see people who dump waste in our waters. We see people who illegally fish in our waters. We see people doing all sorts of things in our waters.

Q. Are you going to sell the weapons to insurgents?

A. No. We don't want these weapons to go to anyone in Somalia . Somalia has suffered from many years of destruction because of all these weapons. We don't want that suffering and chaos to continue. We are not going to offload the weapons. We just want the money.

Q. How much?

A. $20 million, in cash. We don't use any other system than cash.

Q. Will you negotiate?

A. That's deal making. Common sense says human beings can make deals.

Q. Right now, the American Navy has you surrounded. Are you scared?

A. No, we're not scared. We are prepared. We are not afraid because we know you only die once.

Q. Will you kill the hostages if attacked?

A. Killing is not in our plans. We don't want to do anything more than the hijacking.

Q. What will you do with the money?

A. We will protect ourselves from hunger.

Q. That's a lot of money to protect yourselves from hunger.

A. Yes, because we have a lot of men and it will be divided amongst all of us.

Q. [There are 20 crew members, most of them Ukrainian, being held hostage.] How are you interacting with the hostages? Eating with them? Playing cards?

A. We interact with each other in an honorable manner. We are all human beings. We talk to one another, and because we are in the same place, we eat together.

Q. What if you were told you could leave peacefully, without arrest, though without any ransom money. Would you do it?

A. [ With a laugh ] We're not afraid of arrest or death or any of these things. For us, hunger is our enemy.

Q. Have the pirates been misunderstood?

A. We don't consider ourselves sea bandits [”sea bandit” is one way Somalis translate the English word pirate]. We consider sea bandits those who illegally fish in our seas and dump waste in our seas and carry weapons in our seas. We are simply patrolling our seas. Think of us like a coast guard.

Q. Why did you want to become a pirate?

A. We are patrolling our seas. This is a normal thing for people to do in their regions.

Q. Isn't what you are doing a crime? Holding people at gunpoint?

A. If you hold hostage innocent people, that's a crime. If you hold hostage people who are doing illegal activities, like waste dumping or fishing, that is not a crime.

Q. What has this Ukrainian ship done that was a crime?

A. To go through our waters carrying all these weapons without permission.

Q. What is the name of your group? How many ships have you hijacked before?

A. I won't say how many ships we have hijacked. I won't talk about that. Our name is the Central Region Coast Guard.


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