read more »">

Calendar

Somali Pirates Send More Ships to Area of Standoff with US (Video)

Drama in the high seas - Day 3

Drama in the high seas - Day 3

Nairobi/Washington – Somali pirates recaptured the captain of a US-operated ship after he jumped from the lifeboat he was being held on into the Indian Ocean, media reports said Friday, as the US Navy sent extra ships to the region.


Richard Phillips reportedly leapt from the lifeboat in a daring attempt to swim to a US Navy destroyer, which is within visual range of the pirates, US media reported citing unnamed US defence officials.

The incident happened too quickly for the USS Bainbridge to help Phillips, who was apparently unhurt during his recapture.

The Maersk Alabama, a cargo ship carrying food aid, was seized by pirates Wednesday, but the unarmed crew quickly retook the ship. However, Phillips ended up being held on the Alabama’s lifeboat by the pirates.

It remained unclear how Phillips came to be held captive, although some media reports suggested he exchanged himself for the safety of his crew.

The USS Bainbridge, part of a coalition naval force sent to combat piracy in the region, arrived early Thursday and made contact with the lifeboat, according to a spokesman for Maersk Line Ltd, the US company that operates the ship.

Additional Navy ships were being sent to the region, General David Petraeus, who commands US forces in the Middle East

, said Thursday in Florida.

One of the ships is believed to be the USS Halyburton, a frigate with two helicopters on board.

Other pirate-captured vessels were also apparently on their way to the scene, carrying guns and hostages taken from previous seizures, though the pirates were apparently nervous about coming too close to the US fleet, media reported.

Phillips has been in contact with the US Navy and his own crew through a radio and has been given extra batteries. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation is also helping the Navy negotiate the captain’s release.

The Alabama steamed away from the area and was on Friday heading towards its original destination of Mombasa, Kenya.

The hostage drama is expected to drag on for days. Navy forces are generally reluctant to storm ships to free crew members being held hostage.

However, the pirates are in a weak bargaining position with no fuel for the lifeboat and only one hostage. The lifeboat has about 10 days’ supplies of food and water, media reports said.

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates told reporters in Washington on Thursday that the ‘safe return of the captain is the top priority.’

Somali pirates have stepped up their attacks in recent weeks after a brief lull. The Alabama was the sixth ship to have been seized since Saturday.

In 2008, pirates seized dozens of vessels in and around the Gulf of Aden and collected tens of millions of dollars in ransom, prompting the international community to send warships to the region.

Around 15 warships from the European Union, a coalition task force and individual countries such as Russia, the United States, India and China patrol an area of about 2.85 million square kilometres.

However, the pirates are now venturing farther into the Indian Ocean off the south-east coast of Somalia to avoid the international patrols.

The 17,000-ton Alabama, owned by the Danish firm Maersk, was taken around 500 kilometres off Somalia.

Observers have said they feel piracy can only be stopped by dealing with insecurity on the ground in Somalia. A bloody insurgency is ongoing in south and central Somalia, which has not had a functioning government since 1991.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the military was working with its allies to see how to develop a broader plan to deal with piracy in the region.

‘Piracy may be a centuries-old crime, but we are working to bring an appropriate 21st-century response,’ she said.

Comments

comments

Category : VIDEOS and tagged , .
« »

Comment: