Somali pirates clash with security personnel in 3 shootouts as attacks spike, officials say
By APFriday, March 5, 2010
Somali pirates, security personnel in 3 shootouts
NAIROBI, Kenya — Maritime officials say pirates have clashed with private security and military personnel in three separate incidents off the Somali coast in the latest indicator of rising pirate attacks.
Cmdr. John Harbour of the EU Naval Force says two incidents Friday involved French military personnel. The Spanish Defense Ministry says a third incident involved Spanish private security guards and military.
The attacks come one day after a Spanish fishing vessel caught fire after pirates launched a rocket-propelled grenade at it.
Harbour says pirates are beginning to attack in larger numbers because the monsoon season off the Somali coast has ended, resulting in calmer waters.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A retired British couple snatched last year from their sailboat by pirates could be released within weeks as Somali communities inside and outside the East African country work for their freedom, a Somali official said Friday.
Paul and Rachel Chandler were forced by pirates off their 38-foot yacht, the Lynn Rival, and onto an open skiff in October as they headed to Tanzania. Soon after, their pirate captors demanded $7 million to release the Chandlers. Britain’s government refuses to pay ransoms to kidnappers.
Mohamed Omar Dalha, the deputy speaker of Somalia’s parliament, told The Associated Press that Somali communities inside and outside the chaos-wracked country have been working to negotiate the “unconditional release” of the Chandlers. Dalha said Friday that he was hopeful they would be released within two weeks.
“We are hopeful that the British couple will be released as soon as possible without condition,” he said.
It is extremely unusual for pirates to release hostages without being paid ransom money — or what pirates sometimes label their “expenses” for costs incurred while holding hostages. Nevertheless, Dalha said he was discouraging that any ransom be paid, to discourage future hostage-taking.
The Chandlers are among about 130 sailors held hostage in Somalia, which has not had a stable government since warlords overthrew longtime dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.
In the latest pirate attack, the EU Naval Force said it intercepted a pirate group of one mothership and two skiffs early Friday. The pirates earlier attacked a French vessel that had private security on board who repelled the assault.
An EU Naval Force helicopter tracked down the pirates and watched them throw a rocket launcher, grappling hooks and fuel barrels into the ocean. The EU Naval Force said it destroyed the mothership and one skiff and took 11 pirates into custody.
Pirate attacks have been increasing off East Africa the last several years. Pirates attacked ships 217 times in 2009, according to the International Maritime Bureau. That was up from 111 attacks in 2008.
Last year, the average ransom was around $2 million, according to piracy expert Roger Middleton of the British think tank Chatham House. This year, two ransoms paid were around $3 million and $7 million, he said, citing industry officials.
Tags: Africa, East Africa, Hostage Situations, Kenya, Military Affairs, Nairobi, Piracy, Somalia