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Kiev Urged To Pay Pirate Ransom

Issue 352
Front Page
Index
News Headlines
Local and Regional Affairs
Zenawi Says Troops Will Stay In Somalia Until Peacekeepers Deployment
Al-Shabaab Threatens To Attack Kenya
Kiev Urged To Pay Pirate Ransom
Shipping Turns To Private Guards To Combat Pirates
Ethiopian PM Meles' Lecture: ‘Follow Gandhi's Principle - But Do Not Abuse It'
Water NGO Leader Escapes Abduction Attempt In Somalia
First Mosque Opens In Germany 's Ex-Communist East
Nigeria : Pirates Seize 8 Fishing Boats, 96 Hostages
Editorial
 
Southern Negative Impact On Somalis
We Must First Secure Somalia To Make The Waters Safe
Features & Commentry
Thwarting Ethiopia 's Continuing Game–Plan In The Horn - Part Two
Somalia : Pirates' Continuing Evolution
Connectivity And Commitment Pay Dividends In African Transport
How Extremists Groomed Loner To Be Suicide Bomber
The Second Law Of Petropolitics
The Pirates Of Puntland Make Sailors Rich
An Open Letter To The Secretary Of State For Education Ed Balls
International Flotilla To Fight Somali Pirates
Is Toxic Waste Behind Somali Piracy ?
In Crisis-Ridden Somalia , Enjoying The 'Piracy Bubble'
Missing In Action: Africa The Lost Continent
A Somali Influx Unsettles Latino Meatpacker

Opinion

How Britain And Ethiopia Inflicted Regrettable Whammies On Somaliland
Mr. Kipkorir: The First African Neo-Con
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Relatives say they will try to raise the ransom money themselves

Kiev , Ukraine , October 18, 2008 – Relatives of crew members on a seized Ukrainian ship have urged Ukraine to pay a multi-million ransom to pirates holding the vessel off Somalia 's coast.

The relatives held a rally in Kiev , accusing the authorities of inaction in the crisis, which began last month.

The Somali pirates earlier said they would blow up the MV Faina, which has a cargo of tanks, unless a $20m (£12m) ransom was paid by Monday night.

A pirate spokesman later said the deadline may be extended.

The pirates were reviewing the deadline following requests by the ship's owner and other officials, spokesman Sugule Ali told the Associated Press (AP) news agency on Monday.

He said they would decide whether to "modify it and, if that is not possible, to execute it".

US warships have surrounded the MV Faina and a Russian frigate is on its way to help in the operation.

The Kenya-bound ship, together with its mainly Ukrainian crew of 21 and cargo of 33 tanks, was seized on 25 September.

One member of the crew, believed to be Russian, died of a stroke shortly afterwards.

Relatives' pledge

On Monday, a number of angry relatives of the ship's crew members gathered outside President Viktor Yushchenko's office in Kiev , demanding to hold urgent talks over the ransom demands.

"We will not leave until we meet the president. We will sleep on the stairs and will collect the money ourselves," Yelena Priskha, one of the protesters, was quoted as saying by AP.

However, the presidential office said Mr. Yushchenko could not see the relatives immediately as he was attending a meeting.

The government in Kiev has said it is against using force to resolve the stand-off.

Piracy is rife in the busy shipping lanes near to Somalia 's coast and along the Gulf of Aden , where dozens of boats have been hijacked this year.

Somalia has lacked a functioning central government since 1991 and has been afflicted by continual civil strife.

SOURCE: BBC, Tuesday, October 14, 2008

 

 


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