Issue 364
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MOGADISHU, Somalia,
January 11, 2009 – The body of a Somali pirate who drowned just after
receiving a huge ransom washed onshore with $153,000 in cash, a resident
said Sunday, as the spokesman for another group of pirates promised to
soon free a Ukrainian arms ship.
Five pirates drowned Friday when their small boat capsized after they
received a reported $3 million ransom for releasing a Saudi oil tanker.
Local resident Omar Abdi Hassan said one of the bodies had been found on
a beach near the coastal town of Haradhere and relatives were searching
for the other four.
"One of them was discovered and they are still looking for the other
ones. He had $153,000 in a plastic bag in his pocket," he said Sunday.
The U.S. navy released photos of a parachute dropping a package onto the
deck of the Sirius Star, and said the package was likely to be the
ransom delivery.
But five of the dozens of pirates who had hijacked the tanker drowned
when their small boat capsized as they returned to shore in rough
weather. Three other pirates survived but also lost their share of the
ransom.
Graeme Gibbon Brooks, managing director of the British company Dryad
Maritime Intelligence Service Ltd, said the incident was unlikely to
deter attacks.
"The loss or potential loss of the ransom means the pirates will be all
the more keen to get the next ransom in," he said. "There are people
lining up to be pirates."
The Sirius Star had been held near the Ukrainian cargo ship MV Faina,
which was loaded with 33 Soviet-designed battle tanks and crates of
small arms. The same day the Sirius Star was released, the family
members of the Faina crew appealed for help, saying they were not being
kept informed about the negotiations or the state of their loved ones'
health.
But a pirate spokesman assured The Associated Press on Sunday that the
20 crew members on the MV Faina were doing well.
"The cargo is still there unharmed and the crew is healthy," Sugule Ali
said. "Once the negotiations end in mutual understanding, the ship, its
crew and the cargo as well will be released."
There have been several false alarms about the release of the MV Faina
since it was seized last September. Ali said the pirates were still
negotiating with the ship's owners.
"Nothing has changed from our previous demand of $20 million ransom for
the release of the ship, but as negotiations continue we are likely to
reduce the amount," he said. He declined to give further details.
American warships have been closely monitoring the Faina amid fears that
some of the weapons onboard could be taken onshore and fall into the
hands of Islamic insurgents.
The shaky Somali government is battling insurgents the U.S. State
Department says are linked to al-Qaida. But the situation is complicated
by clan militias and rivalries within the Islamist movement.
The latest clashes among Islamist militias have killed at least 29
people and wounded more than 50 others in central Somalia, witnesses
said Sunday. The government now only controls the parliamentary seat of
Baidoa and pockets of Mogadishu, the capital.
Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991 and its lawless
coastline is a perfect haven for pirates, who attacked 111 ships in the
Gulf of Aden and kidnapped 42 of them last year alone. The multimillion
dollar ransoms are one of the only ways to make money in the
impoverished Horn of Africa nation.
An international flotilla including U.S. warships has been patrolling
the area. The flotilla has stopped many attacks, but the area is too
vast to keep all ships safe.
Source: AP
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