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NATO thwarts Somali pirates, seizes dynamite

KATHARINE HOURELD   05/ 2/09 09:30 PM ET   AP

Pirates

NAIROBI, Kenya — Special forces on a Portuguese warship seized explosives from suspected Somali pirates after thwarting an attack on an oil tanker, but later freed the 19 men. Hours later and hundreds of miles away, another band of pirates hijacked a cargo ship, a NATO spokesman said Saturday.

Pirates are now holding 17 ships and around 300 crew, including the Greek-owned cargo ship Ariana, hijacked overnight with its Ukrainian crew.

The attack on the Ariana, about 1,000 miles (1600 kilometers) from the sea corridor NATO guards and the seizure of explosives from the group that attacked the crude oil tanker MV Kition may indicate the pirates are adapting their tactics as crews become better trained in counter-piracy measures.

Sailors are aware that pirates generally attack during the day and that some guidelines suggest designating a safe room with a bulletproof door where crews can lock themselves in case of an attack. Such a room would still be vulnerable to being blown open with explosives.

It was the first time NATO forces found pirates armed with raw explosives, Lt. Cmdr. Fernandes said from the Portuguese frigate the Corte-Real, which responded to the attack. The Corte-Real had sent a helicopter to investigate a distress call from the Greek-owned and Bahamian-flagged Kition late Friday about 100 miles (161 kilometers) north from the Somali coast in the Gulf of Aden.

The suspects fled to a larger pirate vessel without damaging the Kition, but were intercepted by the warship an hour later.

"The skiff had returned to the mothership," Fernandes said, referring to the vessels pirates commonly use to tow their small, fast speed boats hundreds of miles (kilometers) out to sea. "Portuguese special forces performed the boarding with no exchange of fire."

They found four sticks of P4A dynamite _ which can be used in demolition, blasting through walls or potentially breaching a the hull of a ship _ which were destroyed along with four automatic rifles and nine rocket-propelled grenades. It was unclear how the pirates planned to use the dynamite, Fernandes said, because there were no translators to conduct interrogations.

Andrew Mwangura of the East Africa Seafarers' Assistance Program said explosives were also commonly used in illegal fishing.

The 19 pirate suspects were released after consultation with Portuguese authorities because they had not attacked Portuguese property or citizens.

Decisions on detaining piracy suspects fall under national law; Fernandes said Portugal was working on updating its laws to allow for pirate suspects to be detained in such situations.

Nearly 100 ships have been attacked this year by pirates operating from the lawless Somali coastline despite deployment of warships from over a dozen countries to protect the vital Gulf of Aden shipping route.

The latest seizure was another Greek-owned ship, the Maltese-flagged Ariana. Lt. Cmdr. Fernandes, who originally said the ship's British agents were its owners, said it was seized overnight

Spyros Minas, general manager of Athens-based ship owners Alloceans Shipping, said the captain and 23 crew were all Ukrainians and the ship was carrying a cargo of soya from Brazil to Iran when pirates attacked it southwest of the Seychelles islands.

"The captain reported two armed pirates but there may be more. We have not been contacted yet by the pirates regarding ransom," he said.

One hijacked vessel, the Philippine tanker MT Stolt Strength, was held more than five months before a $2.5 million ransom was paid and the ship and 23 crew were released April 21.

Anxious relatives greeted the freed crew in a tearful homecoming Saturday at Manila airport.

The Somali pirates had seized the chemical tanker in the Gulf of Aden on Nov. 10 while it was on its way to India with a cargo of phosphoric acid.

After dropping the pirates close to shore, the ship remained vulnerable, unable to speed to a safe harbor because it was low on fuel. German, U.S. and Chinese naval vessels eventually came to their aid, providing food, medicine and fuel, which allowed them to sail to Oman where they stayed for two days before flying home to Manila.

Second Mate Carlo Deseo said the pirates' evident disorganization was the source of much of his fear.

They "did not seem to know what they were doing," he said.

___

Associated Press Writers Oliver Teves in Manila, Philippines and Demetris Nellas in Athens, Greece contributed to this report.

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NAIROBI, Kenya — Special forces on a Portuguese warship seized explosives from suspected Somali pirates after thwarting an attack on an oil tanker, but later freed the 19 men. Hours later and hu...
NAIROBI, Kenya — Special forces on a Portuguese warship seized explosives from suspected Somali pirates after thwarting an attack on an oil tanker, but later freed the 19 men. Hours later and hu...
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01:42 PM on 05/03/2009
While I am no supporter of piracy . . . I will repeat that for emphasis: I am no supporter of piracy; it strikes me that this article fails to address a serious discrepancy. All these ships we're talking about: "Greek-owned, Bahamian-flagged" and "Greek-owned, Maltese-flagged" are operating nearly as lawlessly as the Somalis. Go any buy yourself any old flag you like off the internet and you're suddenly not subject to international maritime regulations. I understand these were cargo ships and nobody deserves to have their life threatened while they're at work, but THIS IS THE ISSUE. These poor people had their livelihoods stolen by Russian-owned, Uruguayan-flagged and Taiwanese-owned, Serbian-flagged fishing vessels, otherwise known as zombie ships, that flout international regulations and skirt their countries' aquatic harvest limits as defined by the UN and other regulatory agencies. Perhaps we in the West who don't know that fish comes from someplace other than the supermarket will begin to understand the Somali situation better when these zombie ships deprive ALL OF US of fish. It's in our lifetimes, guys. Open your eyes.
08:01 PM on 05/03/2009
"While I am no supporter of piracy "
You are,
People who are against piracy condemn piacy and or propose ideas s on how to improve the lives of the fishers who lost their liverleyhoods. You don't.
You simply justify their actions by making semi-coherent but sweeping accusations
12:11 AM on 05/04/2009
I'm curious... do any of your posts /not/ contain an ad hominem? Man, I feel sorry for your self esteem.
02:23 PM on 05/18/2009
i agree with you
12:36 PM on 05/03/2009
There are a couple of very effective solutions for the piracy problem...both entai raising the cost of playing the game.

1. Set an example of the pirate they brought back to New York...convict him, then castrate him, gouge his eyes out, amputate his hands, and then return him to Somalia.There is no reason to feed and house him for a day.

2. Find a way to allow the ship's crews to "tag" the pirates...then use a UAV or a aircraft to drop MK77 Mark V, the current incarnation of good old NAPALM to incinerate the boarding skiffs, the motherships, and..if they have inflicted harm then hit their home towns with 2,000 lb bunker busters....rumor has it that corpses don't make good pirates.

If you were diagnosed with cancer I doubt you would consider negotiating with it.
04:04 PM on 05/03/2009
1) is that what Jesus would do?

2) uh, try to pay attention, europe has already been using the area to dump chem and nuke toxins, cancer is pretty heavy there now and is one of the reasons they are so desperate they will tacitly at least support the pirates.

all in all your post was very 12th century, all violence fueled by ignorance...
02:22 PM on 05/18/2009
wow your ignorant
11:39 AM on 05/03/2009
I dont understand how the UN hasnt put in place piracy doctrine regarding penalty and seizure.

Its got to be an international UN type of issue to deal with.
And they need detention and international courts to process them.
The way they're doing things now is bass ackwards.

Personally, i say, since they arent using boats for fishing, i say seize all their boats and sell them to indonesia to pay for the cost of detaining, prosecuting, and incarcerating them.
03:28 AM on 05/03/2009
A pirate without a vessel is a land lubber, take the boats and sink them.
06:48 PM on 05/02/2009
One of the ships that was attacked was carrying food for the coast of Somalia. And went to a different
African country instead. The Somali pirates are not always using good judgment, and are working
against their own best interests, but what do you expect of teenagers?
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OceanSize
Don't Ask, Don't Tell is better suited to religion
07:23 PM on 05/02/2009
"The Somali pirates are not always using good judgment"

Your knack for understatement is remarkable.
01:08 AM on 05/03/2009
Criminals rarely care about the common man - except to exploit his weaknesses and fears for profit.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidwayneosedach
05:44 PM on 05/02/2009
NATO 'stumbles' into this pirate attack and actually wins? It's pretty hard to believe.
01:09 AM on 05/03/2009
NATO?

I missed the point in history when the armies of the western alliance were dissolved and reconstituted into a single unified force.

I believe it was the Portuguese for were involved in this action.
04:42 PM on 05/02/2009
How bout we try and help Somalia and its people? How bout we help them achieve a minimum human living standard? How bout we realize they have no choice but to try and steal because they have no food or much of anything else? How bout we admit we've been a greedy ignorant group of people that thinks if people have nothing that its fine and we should have the right to go on with our wasteful lives while we ignore their plight? This on-going story is a great example of the greed and ignorance of the west. What would any of YOU do if you lived in Somalia. Go on eating dirt and be fine with that?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
InfinteShibumi
Just breathe...
06:10 PM on 05/02/2009
That's a lot of whitewashing. As if no one has ever, ever, EVER tried to help Somalia. If you had mentioned toxic waste dumping on the part of western multinational corporations I would have been with you in solidarity. In the meantime, here's a little bit of info to balance the picture you presented: http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/AFRICAEXT/SOMALIAEXTN/0,,menuPK:367675~pagePK:141132~piPK:141107~theSitePK:367665,00.html
06:54 PM on 05/02/2009
Right and piracy is obviously the solution to injustice...when will people come to realize that the end doesn't justify the means. If the Somalis have a gripe it is with the warlords who sold the rights to western corporations to dump off the Somali coast,....or did you miss that part? I happen to think that it would be less costly to help Somalis but the problem is more than just the issue of help. If this situation was only so simple.
02:10 PM on 05/03/2009
The dumping is only part of the story. Illegal overfishing combined with said dumping has utterly destroyed their only means of subsistence. Piracy is literally Somalia's only industry. But the hawks are partly right though I'm shocked to say it. If these poor people really want to fix the situation, they need to turn their firepower onto their corrupt government and establish something to help the people. Remember, the authors of the Magna Carta and our American founding fathers were 'terrorists' in their own times, they're only heroes in retrospect.
02:21 PM on 05/02/2009
This is ridiculous. We can't detect and track these speedboats on AEGIS radar? We can't hit them with little Hellfire missiles launched from aerial drones and/or naval cruisers?

If we start blowing these pirates out of the water with rocket-propelled blast fragmentation warheads, they'll either step it up or stand down. I bet they stand down. Counterinsurgency shouldn't be nearly as hard on the high seas as it is in population centers.

This is exactly the kind of combat operation that we should be good at. Point and click. Like shooting fish in a barrel.
02:37 PM on 05/02/2009
I like your thinking. The USS Cole was attacked because the captain did not defend his own ship. I think these ships should be defended and the hostages should be rescued.
06:56 PM on 05/02/2009
I agree...I wouldn't waste 10 minutes trying to capture them. Blow them out of the water. They're pirates....period. And I don't buy for a minute that we can't track pirates real time. We'd rather not divert our assets from other tasks the military deems more important.
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vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
01:38 PM on 05/02/2009
Perhaps the extra money needed to have a US registered ship and a US crew is worth it for shipping company owners.
Our Navy kicks ass and gets our people back.

Delta - Seals - Special forces - whatever they are called they get it done

America is still #1

Our military, when not over ridden by the politicos

GETS THE JOB DONE.
11:29 PM on 05/02/2009
Where are Blackwater when you need them.
12:25 PM on 05/02/2009
So, why do they keep letting the pirates go free? Why not hold them for hostage swaps with the 300 crewmen being held by the pirates?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doctordoubt
It is never too late to try.
05:48 PM on 05/02/2009
Because there would be no trade. teh fewer there are, the more each of them gets. These are nor organized the way we think of the word. each little band, belongs to a mother ship, and believe me, they would even consider a trade.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
filo
We're all Bozos on this bus.
11:48 AM on 05/02/2009
WHO KNEW ??


Portugal has warships?
03:48 PM on 05/02/2009
Don't be condescending. You sound like a Republican.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
filo
We're all Bozos on this bus.
05:15 PM on 05/02/2009
Don't you EVER curse at me like that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mikecoatl
10:15 PM on 05/03/2009
Portugal has a proud, centuries-long naval history, dating back at least to Henry the Navigator.
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Grant Morrison
Forward, into the Past!!!
11:41 AM on 05/02/2009
..

They had FOUR sticks of commercial grade explosive. Probably stolen from a mining company. They were more likely, in those temperatures, to BLOW THENSELVES UP, than to open a outward opening steel ship hatch.

It takes BRAINS and TRAINING to use explosives as a shaped charge, or to even know where to APPLY the explosive to make it work with the intention you have.

These JOKERS are THEIVES. They need to be stranded on an island somewhere.

.
04:35 PM on 05/02/2009
Agreed, it is not easy to remove a hatch without knowing what you are doing.

Any idea what P4A dynamite is? Can't claim I know much about dynamite but I've never heard of the stuff.
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traumabob
Sardonic Pseudo-intellectual Unabashed Liberal
11:38 AM on 05/02/2009
Quiz if the day.

Which activity is more likely to result in personal physical harm?

A. Being a Somali pirate
B. Running from the L.A. cops

The world had better start getting serious about this, folks.
SouthernBlueBelle
Old and fed up
11:13 AM on 05/02/2009
They released them?? WTF are they nutz?
01:23 PM on 05/02/2009
Yes, they're nutz.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HHarvey
Do not feed the trolls
10:46 AM on 05/02/2009
It might be a good idea to stop paying them the ransom money and get a little more serious about this. They are obviously using that money for something and I guarantee you it's not for food.
05:51 PM on 05/02/2009
They are building trophy homes.

Just like the pirates on Wall Street did with their loot.

It is real easy to say we shouldn't pay ransom. And you are correct that that just encourages the pirates.

But it is a whole different situation when it is your employee, family member, friend or even countryman being held hostage.

As I understand it most of the hostages are from poorer countries.

And I respect any of the ship owners who will do what it takes to get their people back safely.

P.S. The USA paid ransom to the Barbary Pirates to get their people back. So it is not without precedent.