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A Little Bit Like Suicide

Issue 382

Front Page

News Headlines

Somaliland Celebrates Independence

Terrorists Arrested In Buroa

Rains Reveal Mass Grave

WFP Ship Docks In Berbera

Doctors Conference In Hargeysa

Upper House Committee Visits The Injured Of Ceelbardaale Conflict

USACC Somaliland Recognition

Home Secretary Was Warned Of MI5's 'Blackmailing Of Muslims'

Local and Regional Affairs

British House Of Lords Debates On Somalia/Somaliland

Report: Shabaab Leader Wounded In Mogadishu Explosion

Somaliland Clans In Ceasefire Over Disputed Farmland

Fighting Kills At Least 45 In Somali Capital

Teen Somali Piracy Suspect Pleads Not Guilty In NY

US Seeks Coordinated, Sustainable Somali Strategy

Eritrea Rejects Security Council Accusations Of Destabilizing Somalia

INTERVIEW-Australia's Range Oil Shrugs Off Somali Pirates

Journalist Killed In Mogadishu; Third Somali Fatality This Year

UNHCR Steps Up Efforts To Stem Gulf Of Aden Crossings As Numbers Mount
IGAD Wants Eritrea Punished Over Chaos In Somalia
Wanted Al Qaeda Man Flew In Kenyan Plane

Vital To Address Root Causes Of Somali Piracy: Anifah

The Walrus And Geez Win Utne Independent Press Awards
Uganda: Iran To Fund Oil Processing In Country
Minneapolis Man Pleads Guilty To Conspiracy To Provide Material Support To Al Qaeda

Editorial

Chickens Come Home To Roost

Editor's Choice

War in Somalia: Protecting Somaliland's Peace Should Be a Priority

Features & Commentary

Jihadists Attack Somalia: Al-Qaeda On The March

Somaliland Strives To Distinguish Itself In Troubled Region

Exclusive: How MI5 Blackmails British Muslims

The Somaliland Independent Scholars Group

KINGSTONE: 'I Was Robbed By The Pirates'

A Little Bit Like Suicide

Oxfam Senior Policy Advisor Testifies On Somalia

Indonesia – Qatar: Deals On The Horizon

International News

 

Undercover Operation 'Foiled Bronx Bomb Plot'

Obama And Cheney Clash On Future Of Guantanamo

President Jacob Zuma congratulates Malawi

Laos Probes How Jailed Brit Became Pregnant

Opinion

Somalia: When NSUM’s “Mission Report” Fails “The” Mission

Who Is Arming The Somali Radicals In Somalia?

Wasted Votes

Somaliland Still Going Strong

The Importance Of Education For Our Youth

Why Egypt Always Gets Her Way?

Tue, 19 May 2009 – The residents of Berbera, a Somaliland port in the pirate-infested Gulf of Aden, call 62-year-old Jurgen Kantner "the mad German sailor".

On June 23 last year, Kantner and his wife Sabine Merz were steering their modest sailing yacht through Somali waters when armed pirates captured them and brought them ashore to a mountain hideout.

Mock executions

After being subjected to deprivations and mock executions during their 52-day hostage ordeal, the pair are back in what is considered one of the most dangerous countries on the planet to reclaim their ship, the Rockall.

"My boat is my life and I don't want to lose her, nothing more. I don't care about pirates and governments," Kantner said while taking a break from his repair work in Berbera, the main port in Somaliland.

The Rockall's hijacking was a rare case of a ship being captured by pirates in the waters of Somaliland, a northern breakaway state which has generally been more stable and prosperous than the rest of Somalia.

But the stretch of land facing the location of the hijacking is disputed by Puntland, a neighbouring breakaway region which is home to most of the pirates groups that are preying on the world's merchant fleets.

European tourists are few and far between in the troubled region and the couple, who live on their boat in the harbour, are perceived as odd birds by the local population.

"They think that I'm insane"

"They think that I'm insane, they call me the crazy white guy or the mad German sailor but they don't know how important my boat is to me," he said.

Sipping sweet white tea with his wife and a German-speaking Somali friend at a cafe near the harbour, Kantner appears in no danger of suffering from the Stockholm syndrome.

"It was my worst experience ever. It was really painful and they were intimidating us the whole time," said the burly German, sporting a wild head of thick white hair.

"One day I said to them I hoped a plane would bomb us all to bits, so that we all die together," he said.

The couple was released in August 2008. A ransom of $600 000 dollars is believed to have been paid but Kantner declined to elaborate on the circumstances of his release.

Concerned with nothing in this world but his wife and the sea, Kantner admits to being of slightly bearish disposition and has few kind words for the "clumsy local mechanics" or "the German officials who resent my presence here."

I have no friends back home

"I have no friends back home because I lost contact in 32 years living on my boat. Why should I go back to Germany where I have nobody to help me?"

"This is my life and it's wonderful. I have all my things on my boat and I travel to many places in the world. Sailing is how I want to live and die," he said, removing his reading glasses to gaze at the sea.

When asked if his end might not come sooner than expected if he tries to sail through the Gulf of Aden again, he admitted he needed to devise a strategy to dodge the region's fast-breeding ransom-hunters.

"I will start sailing soon after I finish mending the boat," he said, clambering over small fishing nets and oily engine parts littering the deck of the Rockall, anchored between two Somaliland navy ships.

"I know it's dangerous sailing off into Somali waters and I have no private security guarding me but I pray to God that pirates won't get me again. It's a little bit like suicide," Kantner said coldly.

Buying a gun is an option

"Of course, buying a gun is an option but I haven't decided yet."

The German was critical of the international navies' approach to dealing with Somali pirates: "If you catch one, chop his hand off. If he tries to escape, shoot to kill. Sharia (Islamic law) is a punishment they understand.

Somalia's marauding buccaneers have captured some 50 ships since Kantner's first mishap, most of them merchant vessels.

A French family on a world sailing tour was also snatched earlier this year and the father accidentally shot dead by French commandos meant to rescue them.

For obvious reasons, Kantner refused to reveal anything about how he intends to sail safely out of the ever-widening zone affected by Somali piracy and reach his next destination: Malaysia.

"If I get there safely, me and my wife will take a week-long holiday, just resting. And I really hope the pirates don't catch me because this time no-one will pay and everybody will tell the pirates: 'Keep him'."

Source: AFP


 


 


 



 




 








 

 

 

 


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