US navy seizes pirate ship off Somalia (AP) Updated: 2006-01-23 08:40
The U.S. Navy boarded an apparent pirate ship in the Indian Ocean and
detained 26 men for questioning, the Navy said Sunday.
The 16 Indians and 10 Somali men were aboard a traditional dhow that was
chased and seized Saturday by the U.S. guided missile destroyer USS Winston S.
Churchill, said Lt. Leslie Hull-Ryde of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command in
Bahrain.
The dhow stopped fleeing after the Churchill twice fired warning shots during
the chase, which ended 54 miles off the coast of Somalia, the Navy said. U.S.
sailors boarded the dhow and seized a cache of small arms.
The dhow's crew and passengers were being questioned Sunday aboard the
Churchill to determine which were pirates and which were legitimate crew
members, Hull-Ryde said.
Sailors aboard the dhow told Navy investigators that pirates hijacked the
vessel six days ago near Mogadishu and thereafter used it to stage pirate
attacks on merchant ships.
The Churchill is part of a multinational task force patrolling the western
Indian Ocean and Horn of Africa region to thwart terrorist activity and other
lawlessness during the U.S.-led war in Iraq.
The Navy said it captured the dhow in response to a report from the
International Maritime Bureau in Kuala Lumpur on Friday that said pirates had
fired on the MV Delta Ranger, a Bahamian-flagged bulk carrier that was passing
some 200 miles off the central eastern coast of Somalia.
Hull-Ryde said the Navy was still investigating the incident and would
discuss with international authorities what to do with the detained men.
"The disposition of people and vessels involved in acts of piracy on the high
seas are based on a variety of factors, including the offense, the flags of the
vessels, the nationalities of the crew, and others," Hull-Ryde said in an
e-mail.
Piracy is rampant off the coast of Somalia, which is torn by renewed clashes
between militias fighting over control of the troubled African country. Many
shipping companies resort to paying ransoms, saying they have few alternatives.
Last month, Somali militiamen finally relinquished a merchant ship hijacked
in October.
In November, Somali pirates freed a Ukrainian ore carrier and its 22 member
crew after holding it for 40 days. It was unclear whether a US$700,000 ransom
demanded by the pirates had been paid.
One of the boldest recent attacks was on Nov. 5, when two boats full of
pirates approached a cruise ship carrying Western tourists, about 100 miles off
Somalia and fired rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles.
The crew used a weapon that directs earsplitting noise at attackers, then
sped away.
Somalia has had no effective government since 1991, when warlords ousted a
dictatorship and then turned on each other, carving the nation of 8.2 million
into a patchwork of fiefdoms.
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