Issue 368
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ABOARD THE
USNS LEWIS AND CLARK, February 13, 2009 — U.S. Navy and Russian warships
arrested 26 suspected pirates off Somalia in separate operations this
week, while a maritime watchdog warned on Friday that attacks are
stepping up as weather improves and pirates look to replenish their haul
after releasing ships hijacked for ransom.
The latest arrests came Thursday, when an American helicopter from the
USS Vella Gulf fired warning shots at gunmen in two skiffs that had
opened fire and tried to board the Indian-flagged vessel Premdivya.
U.S. forces searched the skiff and found weapons including
rocket-propelled grenades, then took nine suspected pirates aboard the
American ship, the Bahrain-based 5th Fleet said.
On Wednesday, the same American ship detained seven other suspected
pirates — the Navy's first arrests since it established an anti-piracy
task force this year. The suspects, armed with AK-47s and
rocket-propelled grenades, had tried to board the Marshall
Islands-flagged vessel Polaris using a ladder from their skiff.
The pirates were transferred via helicopter to the USNS Lewis and Clark
on Thursday, according to Lt. Nathan Christensen, a 5th Fleet spokesman.
Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said they could be handed over to
Kenya, after the United States last month agreed to hand pirate suspects
to the east African nation.
Associated Press Television News footage from aboard the Lewis and Clark
showed some of the men, handcuffed and wearing leg shackles and white
jumpsuits, being escorted from helicopters onto the ship.
They were given a meal, a blanket, a towel and a bar of soap, but they
were not allowed to talk to each other. U.S. forces assisted by a
translator were trying to get information from the men, such as their
ages and nationalities. The men were then taken to a holding area
surrounded by razor wire and guarded.
Separately, the Russian navy said Friday its nuclear-powered heavy
missile cruiser Peter The Great detained 10 Somali pirates closing in on
an Iranian-flagged fishing trawler. Russian military prosecutors were
questioning the men, who were caught on Thursday with rifles,
grenade-launchers, illegal narcotics and a large sum of money, the navy
said.
Piracy off Somalia, which has not had a functioning government since
1991, reached record levels last year. Somali pirates, seeking
multimillion-dollar ransoms, launched 111 attacks and seized 42 vessels
last year, mostly in the Gulf of Aden, with attacks peaking between
September and November.
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Somali piracy accounted for the bulk of the 49 vessels hijacked and 889
crewmembers taken hostage around the world in 2008 — the highest
worldwide figures since the London-based International Maritime Bureau
began keeping records in 1991.
The increased danger led the United States, India, Britain, China,
Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and other countries to send warships
to the area to protect commercial vessels and more quickly rush to their
aid.
Still, attacks have continued, and the maritime watchdog warned on
Friday ships plying the popular trade route off eastern Africa to be
more vigilant.
Noel Choong, chief of the bureau's reporting center in Kuala Lumpur,
said six ships were attacked on Wednesday and Thursday alone. "We
haven't seen such an increase in attacks for some time," said Choong.
Since the beginning of January, 22 vessels had been attacked, and three
were hijacked. Choong said favorable weather made it easier for the
smaller pirate boats to ambush ships. He also said seven ships have been
released over the past month, likely pushing pirates to try to replenish
their stocks.
In the latest release, pirates freed a Japanese-owned cargo ship and its
23 crew members after nearly three months in captivity, a diplomat based
in Nairobi, Kenya, said Friday.
The MV Chemstar Venus, owned by a Japanese shipping company and
registered in Panama, was seized by armed Somali gunmen on Nov. 15 in
the Gulf of Aden. On board were five South Koreans and 18 Filipinos. The
diplomat, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to
speak to the media, said the ship carrying unidentified chemicals was
released Thursday night. There was no immediate word if a ransom was
paid.
In the aftermath of what was one of the most dramatic pirate heists,
Ukrainian sailors returned home after four months in captivity after the
seizure of their cargo ship, MV Faina, which was loaded with tanks and
heavy weapons. The sailors stepped off a plane in Kiev, tanned but
exhausted-looking for a tearful reunion with their families on the
tarmac.
Faina's ordeal began in September, when scores of heavily armed Somali
pirates swarmed onboard as it carried 33 Soviet-designed tanks and
crates of small arms headed to Kenya. The pirates released the vessel
last week, reportedly after receiving a $3.2 million ransom.
The Faina, with its cargo, docked on Thursday at the Kenyan port of
Mombasa. Foreign governments had feared the Faina's weapons might fall
into the hands of Somali insurgents, who the U.S. State Department says
are linked to Al Qaeda.
Source: AP
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