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Quite an interesting situation. Kudos to the crew of the USS James E. Williams!
Avaassst ye pirates!!! (Sorry, I couldn't resist! ;D )
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryId=97598
Avaassst ye pirates!!! (Sorry, I couldn't resist! ;D )
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryId=97598
US ship helps North Korea vessel crew overpower Somali pirates
Agence France-Presse
MOGADISHU - The US Navy helped the crew of a North Korean cargo vessel regain control of their freighter in a violent struggle Tuesday after it was captured by pirates off Mogadishu port, it said.
At least two attackers died in the clashes and five were captured, while three of the 22-strong crew of the MV Dai Hong Dan crew were seriously injured, the Bahrain-based US Naval Forces Central Command said.
The USS James E. Williams responded after the Kuala Lumpur-based International Maritime Bureau passed on a distress signal from the North Korean ship following its seizure by pirates overnight Monday.
"Three seriously injured crew members have been transferred to the James E. Williams for treatment," the statement said.
"Initial reports from the crew are that five pirates were captured and two are dead. The pirates remain aboard the Dai Hong Dan."
The North Korean ship was headed to the Somali port of Aden with casualties on board, said Andrew Mwangura, head of the Kenya chapter of the Seafarers' Assistance Program.
Earlier Ali Gabow Jillo, the Mogadishu trader who had contracted the vessel, told AFP that the US Navy had helped it regain control.
Mogadishu port security officials said the pirates who seized the North Korean boat were members of a Somali clan who were meant to be guarding it.
"The crew members have taken control of the ship after defeating the eight men who hijacked it last night," said Dahir Hassan, an elder in the Somali port of Haradere.
"There are casualties, but we are not sure of the exact number of dead or injured," he added. "Now the ship is out there and some government forces and businessmen from Mogadishu have been dispatched to the area."
Mwangura confirmed the release of the freighter, which was contracted by Mogadishu traders to deliver general cargo.
"We have information that ship has been rescued," Mwangura, who monitors maritime transport, told AFP from the port town of Mombasa.
"We are waiting for the ship to return to port ... so that we can get more information," he added, explaining that initial reports indicated the "crew members were from southern Asia nations."
African Union peacekeepers charged with protecting the port said the vessel was outside their operation area.
"It was far away from the seaport, it was at the anchorage. The hijacking was masterminded by the same people who were supposed to bring it into the docking," captain Paddy Ankunda told AFP.
Ankunda said the militiamen had asked for 15,000 dollars (10,000 euros) to free the freighter, which arrived in Mogadishu 10 days before and had already unloaded its cargo.
The incident was the second piracy attack off Somalia's 3,700 kilometer (2,300 miles) coastline in recent days.
On Sunday, a Japanese chemical tanker with 23 Korean, Filipino and Myanmar crew on board was hijacked off the coast of northern Somalia.
"Four other vessels remain under pirate control off the coast of southern Somalia," said the statement from the US Navy, part of the Combined Joint Task Force Horn of Africa (CTF 150), based in Djibouti to fight terrorism in the volatile region.
The CTF-150 also operate under international maritime conventions to secure international waters for commercial shipping and fishing.
Rampant piracy off Somalia's vast coastline stopped in the second half of 2006 during six months of strict rule by an Islamist movement, ousted by Ethiopian and Somali government troops at the end of the year.
The French navy is due mid-November to deploy a vessel to protect UN World Food Program-charted ships, which have been targeted while ferrying supplies to Somalia in recent months.
Somalia lies at the mouth of the Red Sea and has lacked a functional government since the 1991 ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre sparked a bloody power struggle.