Somali pirates capture two ships
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
- 24 February 2011: Pirates kill four American hostages
- 11 February 2011: Tankers taken by pirates in Indian Ocean
- 24 September 2010: Kenyan court jails seven pirates for 2009 attempted hijack of Maltese ship
- 31 August 2010: As increase in digital music sales slows, record labels look to new ways to make money
- 27 July 2010: Seychelles sentences Somali pirates to ten years in prison
Pirates from Somalia have captured two ships in the Gulf of Aden on Monday. The ships thought to be captured are the British owned St James Park chemical tanker, and the Panamanian Navios Apollon cargo ship. This brings the total number of ships being held by the pirates to ten. Also on Monday, pirates released a Singapore-owned cargo ship, the Kota Wajar, for US$4 million (€2.7m, £2.5m) ransom.
The pirate commander Mohamed Shakir told The Times “We have hijacked a ship with [a] British flag in the Gulf of Aden late yesterday, we have peacefully captured the ship and no shots were fired and [there are] no casualties.” The St James Park's owner Zodiac Maritime Agencies released a statement saying that none of the crew had been injured and that they are working to get the crew members released.
Somalia's provisional government has vowed to fight piracy in their territory, although the pirates appear to outnumber the government. The government receives aid from foreign nations and the European Union to help fight the piracy. Large ransoms appear to be the motive for young Somalians and foreigners to hijack these ships.
[edit] Sources
- "Somali pirates hijack two ships off East African coast" — BBC News, December 29, 2009
- Abdi Guled. "Somali pirates seize two more ships" — Reuters, December 29, 2009
- "Somali pirates hijack UK ship, release another" — Xinhua News Agency, December 29, 2009
- Tristan McConnell. "UK-flagged tanker, St James Park, seized by Somali pirates" — The Times, December 29, 2009
