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The Threat of Modern Piracy- A Merged Thread

three British security guards were rescued by helicopter after jumping into the sea, officials said.

Were this guys not armed properly or did they got caught a-sleep?

Maybe the ships watch did not notice the fast boats approach and by the time they saw them, there were too many pirates on-board already?

obviously, I don't know a thing about a ship's protection, etc.

cheers,
Frank
 
PanaEng said:
Were this guys not armed properly or did they got caught a-sleep?

Maybe the ships watch did not notice the fast boats approach and by the time they saw them, there were too many pirates on-board already?

obviously, I don't know a thing about a ship's protection, etc.

Apparantly from sourcescheers,
Frank


Good point "Frank", sounds like they weren't doing their job to the best of their abilities. It should have read:

Apparently from sources, of the three Security Guards on board a Tanker one Guard was Killed and One Wounded while fighting off over whelming odds of Pirates boarding their ship. The remaining Guard along with the 25 Crewmen were taken prisoner. The bodies of eight dead Pirates were found floating at the location of the incident.

I'd sure like to be privy to their statements. I wonder if they will put that on their Resumes. (how I saved my own A.s).

Cheers.
 
TheHead said:
I did not say that at all and neither did he. OldsSoldier would NEVER say that.   

Also it was the Indian Army Navy


I never said you did, try following the bouncing ball.
 
How would one go about protecting a merchant vessel?
One would think that the bridge would be locked and the entrance guarded. Maybe the bridge pers would be armed?
Any areas that are suscetible to being boarded would be secured.



Speculation here...
 
British and Irish anti-piracy experts rescued - after pirates attack
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article5253731.ece
Martin Fletcher from Times Online November 28, 2008

Two British and one Irish security guard have been plucked from the sea by a military helicopter after jumping from a chemical tanker seized by pirates off Somalia.

Their decision to abandon the two dozen crew members still on board attracted some criticism, but their British employer insisted that the three former soldiers were heroes who had resisted a sustained attack by heavily-armed pirates with great courage and would have been killed if they had stayed any longer.

“They were unarmed. They had no other option...As far as I’m concerned they deserve a medal,” said Nick Davis, a former British army pilot who runs Anti-Piracy Maritime Security Solutions (APMSS) out of Poole, Dorset.

The attack happened early this morning as the Liberian-flagged tanker, the Biscaglia, was sailing through the Gulf of Aden from India to Rotterdam.

The Nivose would have taken two hours to reach the scene so it dispatched a helicopter, but by the time it arrived the six pirates had already seized the Biscaglia.

“There were three members of the crew on the roof (of the ship),” said Frederic Karakaya, the helicopter pilot. “They were hiding and signalled to us. They were spotted, and jumped into the water.

“We pretended we hadn’t seen them so we didn’t alert the pirates to their position. We dropped a coloured marker, then gave their position to a German Lynx (helicopter) which winched them aboard.”

The three guards, still wearing baseball caps and lifejackets, were deposited on the Nivose and later transferred to another French naval vessel, the Jean de Vienne. They were uninjured but have not yet been named.

At least 27 other crew members - 25 Indians and two Bangladeshis - were being held hostage on board the Biscaglia, which was reportedly heading for the semi-autonomous northern region of Puntland.

One western aid official closely involved with Somalia told The Times that after all the calls for commercial vessels to hire security guards it was “somewhat ironic that they jump overboard to save themselves”.

But Mr Davis staunchly defended his team. He said they had been attacked by six pirates in a high-speed skiff armed with AK47s and rocket-propelled grenades.

He claimed the three guards - two former marines and an ex-paratrooper - held them off for about 40 minutes, long enough for the crew to send out a distress call and seek safety below deck.

They fired water cannon at the pirates, and zig-zagged. They also used a long range accoustic device (LRAD) which fires laser-like beams of excruciatingly-painful sound at attackers. They beat off three or four attacks but the pirates then began firing RPGs at the LRAD’s operator.

Mr Davis said the pirates continued to shoot at the security guards after boarding, and that the three men had no choice but to abandon ship. The pirates then fired on them while they were in the water, and tried to run them down in the hijacked vessel.

“They did what they felt they had to do to save their lives and the lives of the crew,” said Mr Davis, 37.

The Biscaglia is the 97th vessel this year to be attacked in the waters off Somalia, where Islamist insurgents are battling a weak, western-backed government and all semblance of law and order has broken down. At least 15 ships, and more than 300 crew members, are being held for ransom.

APMSS provides three-man teams of former soldiers to protect commercial vessels, and in recent weeks the demand for its services has soared. It presently has teams on ten ships off Somalia - each costing £14,000 for three days - and only last week Mr Davis boasted that “there has never been a successful boarding with a security force on board a vessel.

As the Biscaglia was seized, Somali pirates released a Greek-owned cargo ship, the Centauri, that they captured on Setpember 18. The crew of 25 Filipinos was unharmed. It was unclear whether the owners paid a ransom.

The ships still being held include the Sirius Star, a giant tanker carrying two million barrels of oil which was seized on November 15. Its captors have warned of “disastrous consequences” if its Saudi owners do not pay a $25 million ransom by tomorrow.

And from Anti Piracy Maritime Security Solutions (Non-Lethal) website
APMSS team are all ex royal marines that have focused on maritime security as their profession. All of our teams are STCW trained and all are SSO trained. We only employ ex serviceman capable of operating in the civil maritime sector who can make the full ships complement at every level feel safe without putting the fear of god into them at heightened security times.

While there may be some question about the sensibility of placing "unarmed" security guards on vessels, it should be noted that having items that pose a fire hazard (such as guns, ammo and things that go boom) are counterindicated (and usually prohibited) on major commercial vessels (like tankers) that carry flammable cargo.  Should a tanker carrying an "armed" security team go up in flames during a gun battle with pirates, it would be almost assured that the insurers of the vessel or cargo would attempt to claim that they contributed to the loss.

 
Blackadder1916 said:
British and Irish anti-piracy experts rescued - after pirates attack
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article5253731.ece
And from Anti Piracy Maritime Security Solutions (Non-Lethal) website
While there may be some question about the sensibility of placing "unarmed" security guards on vessels, it should be noted that having items that pose a fire hazard (such as guns, ammo and things that go boom) are counterindicated (and usually prohibited) on major commercial vessels (like tankers) that carry flammable cargo.  Should a tanker carrying an "armed" security team go up in flames during a gun battle with pirates, it would be almost assured that the insurers of the vessel or cargo would attempt to claim that they contributed to the loss.


I've read some pretty stupid and senseless things, but this Mr. Davis and the reason for not arming the Security Personnel takes the cake.

Hey Guys, we're having a rash of Armed Bank Hold Ups, Lets stop it by putting Unarmed Bank Guards in all our Banks, Yeah ! and while we're at it we'll paint Big Red Target Signs on their Backs. That should do the trick and we'll charge 14,000 pounds. Jesus gimme a Break.

An attacked vessel is a write off if seized anyway and its going to cost a great deal of money what ever avenue they take. No wonder  the Pirates are so Brazen with Idiots running the show.

So a oil tanker goes up (the scenario of the fire hazard is highly exaggerated by the way) and the big concern is the Bloody Insurance Companies.

And any Ex what ever, who signs on with a Fire Hose and a Big Stick as a Security Guard aboard prime targets, is a Bloody Fool or Drunk or a Hasbin or all three.

 
I'll have to agree with Fast Eddy and OldSolduer about their stance against using non-lethal measures against these pirates. They just don't work! This non-lethal BS just doesn't cut it.

And why only just 3 security guards? So shipping companies are just not willing enough to pay for a full section/squad?
 
Blackadder1916 said:
Should a tanker carrying an "armed" security team go up in flames during a gun battle with pirates, it would be almost assured that the insurers of the vessel or cargo would attempt to claim that they contributed to the loss.

I can see that fear; plus paying a couple of $M in ransom instead of full insured cost of the shipment may make economic sense - but in the long run?
The insurance companies won't assimilate the cost, they just pass it along by raising premiums.
 
Pirates attack cruise ship carrying Britons
Carolyn Spencer Brown from Times Online December 1, 2008

Pirates fired shots on Sunday at a cruise ship carrying British, American, Australian and Canadian passengers as it sailed through the Gulf of Aden in an attempt to seize.

One of the attack boats fired eight shots at Oceania Cruises' Nautica and got within 300 yards before the ship's captain was able to pull away to safety.

"As the vessel sailed past several groups of non-hostile fishing vessels, two small skiffs were sighted by the Officer on Duty and deemed potentially hostile," Oceania reported in a statement.

There were no injuries caused during the incident, which occurred when most guests were at breakfast. Many were completely unaware that the situation had occurred.

As pirate attacks off the coast of Somalia involving cargo ships have become more frequent than ever, cruise ships, too, are seeing increased risk in the region.

Oceania's Nautica, which carries up to 684 passengers, is the second cruise ship this year to have been confronted.

In April, pirates seized Le Ponant, a three-masted luxury vessel. That ship was carrying 30 crew members - though no passengers - and after an eight-day standoff those onboard were rescued. The ship was ultimately rescued and the pirates captured.

Seabourn Spirit, another luxury vessel, also ran into trouble in the area. In December 2005, pirates with missile launchers got close enough to fire on the ship. In this case, a few crew members were injured.

The ship was travelling "within the prescribed Maritime Safety Protection Area which is patrolled by international anti-piracy task forces," but many other vessels, from lines such as the Dutch-registered Holland America and Germany's Hapag-Lloyd, travel through this region with protection from their national navies and/or in convoys.

Oceania Nautica, transiting between the Mediterranean and Asia, is continuing to cruise and is on schedule.

Carolyn Spencer Brown is editor of www.cruisecritic.co.uk

I've viewed several articles about this story (from different media outlets/news agencies) and most are very similar in detail to the above with the exception of the following.  These actions may have been taken after the event was basically over and perhaps may be an attempt to portray one's navy in a positive light and show that the deployment is actually doing something.


Int'l force stops pirates hijacking cruise ship: Danish navy
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/world/12/01/08/intl-force-stops-pirates-hijacking-cruise-ship-danish-navy
Agence France-Presse  12/01/2008 9:30 PM

COPENHAGEN - International coalition warships stopped Somali pirates from hijacking a luxury cruise ship in the Gulf of Aden at the weekend, the Danish navy said Monday.

A Danish navy spokesman refused to name the vessel involved but a Danish media report said the cruise ship Nautica, carrying 400 passengers and 200 crew was the target of the latest attack by Somali pirates.

"The (Danish) navy's tactical command on Sunday led a military operation, dispatching a vessel from the coalition to the aid of a civilian ship threatened by pirates, thereby preventing an act of piracy," Danish navy spokesman Jesper Lynge told AFP.

Lynge said it was up to the countries involved to give details of the cruise ship involved.

According to Danish TV2 News, six to eight armed pirates on two speed boats were observed speeding toward the Nautica, a cruiseliner that had departed from Florida and was carrying 400 passengers and 200 crew.

A French navy warship, alerted by the Danish Navy, scrambled a helicopter to the scene, which sent the pirates fleeing, TV2 News said.

On September 15, Denmark took command of the multinational naval force Task Force 150, aimed at combatting acts of piracy and weapons smuggling in the northern part of the Indian Ocean.

The Danish navy has deployed a warship, the Absalon, in the region. Its mission was to end on January 12, but has been extended until April 1, Danish Defence Minister Soeren Gade announced last week.

Despite the presence of foreign navies in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean, hijackers have defied them and seized ships including a Saudi super-tanker and a Ukrainian vessel carrying tanks other other weapons.

Hundreds of sailors captured in numerous piracy attacks are held hostage on the Somali coast.

as of 12/01/2008 9:30 PM


 
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/somali-pirates-agree-on-ransom-for-tanks-ship-1042739.html

Somali pirates agree on ransom for tanks ship

By Steve Gutterman in Moscow
Monday, 1 December 2008

Somali pirates have agreed on a ransom for a Ukrainian freighter carrying tanks and other heavy weapons and it could be released within days, said Mikhail Voitenko, a spokesman for the owner, Vadim Alperin. The MV Faina could be freed, with its 20-man crew, if agreement is reached on how to get the ransom money to the pirates, who seized the ship off the coast of Somalia in late September, said Mr Voitenko, editor of Maritime Bulletin-Sovfrakht, a shipping news website.

Pirate attacks off Somalia have surged more than 75 per cent this year, and the seizure of the Faina raised particular concern because of its cargo of 33 tanks and other weapons and ammunition. Its Russian captain died days after the hijacking. Russia sent a missile destroyer to the region to protect other cargo vessels, and the Faina has been watched by US and other warships to prevent removal of its cargo, which authorities fear could get into the hands of Somali factions or be sold.

Mr Voitenko would not give the amount of the agreed ransom, but suggested it was far lower than the pirates' initial $20m (£13m) demand. He said the average ransom for hijacked ships was $1.5m to $1.8m and that the latest public demand he was aware of for the Faina was $3m.

A successful release of the ship, cargo and crew would signal to pirates that they cannot expect to sell or receive higher ransoms for valuable cargoes, Mr Voitenko said. Somali pirates seized the Sirius Star, a Saudi tanker carrying $100m worth of crude oil, on 15 November.

Piracy is considered the biggest moneymaker in Somalia, which has had no stable government for decades. A report by the London-based think-tank Chatham House said pirates raked in up to $30m in ransoms this year alone.

The US 5th Fleet said it has repelled about two dozen pirate attacks since 22 August in the Gulf.
 
old medic said:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/somali-pirates-agree-on-ransom-for-tanks-ship-1042739.html

Somali pirates agree on ransom for tanks ship

By Steve Gutterman in Moscow
Monday, 1 December 2008


Delivary of ransom, no problem, just pack in the Head of a Low Yield Nuke, they'll soon loose public support and their Bravado,

And the Idiots who let The M.V. Faina sail without a Heavy Naval escort though those waters ought to be put in Jail.

Of course Mr Davis could have put three of his Ex British Marines with their Broom Handles, that would have done the job !.
 
NATO Shipping Centre
http://www.shipping.nato.int

SOMALIA PIRACY UPDATE  21 November 2008
as at 252314Z NOV 2008
UNCLAS

Following a short lull in piracy incidents, possibly due to adverse weather conditions, there has been a very recent surge of incidents.
Two vessels have been released, MV GREAT CREATION and MV GENIUS.
15 vessels remain hijacked comprising 12 merchant ships 2 fishing vessels and tug boat Yenegoa Ocean.
The slide displays last known position of hijacked vessels.
The total number of commercial vessels (including one tug) hijacked in Somali waters now stands at 14; over 200 merchant seamen are held by pirates. The use of mother-ships seems to be on the rise, and potentially, vessels are hijacked with the sole intention of using them as such.

In short, the trends in latest piracy incidents are as follows:
 Targeting larger cargo / oil / gas / chemical tankers
 Approaches / attacks conducted from 2-3 small speedboats with 3-5 armed persons each. The number of boats involved in each incident seems to be increasing.


NATO Shipping Centre

SOMALIA PIRACY UPDATE 26 November 2008
as at 271754Z NOV 2008  
UNCLAS

There appears to be a lull in piracy activity: no new hijackings have been reported/can be confirmed since MV DELIGHT 18 Nov. Recent press reporting of Yemeni vessel hijacked cannot be confirmed by independent sources and is being investigated. Most recent confirmed incidents were 2 approaches and one attack, all of which occurred in the Gulf of Aden during 23-24 Nov (As shown on slide) On 18 Nov Thai FV EKWATANAVA 5 was engaged and sunk by Indian Naval vessel TABAR. At the time of the engagement EKWATANAVA5 was under the control of pirates who probably intended to use her as a mother ship. 14 vessels remain hijacked comprising 12 merchant ships 1 fishing vessel and tug boat Yenegoa Ocean.
The current slide displays last known position of hijacked vessels.

The total number of commercial vessels (including one tug) hijacked in Somali waters now stands at 14; over 200 merchant seamen are held by pirates. The use of mother-ships seems to be on the rise, and potentially, vessels are hijacked with the sole intention of using them as such.

In short, the trends in latest piracy incidents are as follows:

Targeting larger cargo / oil / gas / chemical tankers
Approaches / attacks conducted from 2-3 small speedboats with 3-5 armed persons each. The number of boats involved in each incident seems to be increasing.  

 
Is it possible for Somali pirates to expand their operations into the Persian Gulf? Is it possible for them to threaten the following cruise route?

http://www.costacruisesasia.com/B2C/PAO/Shopping/Month/CruiseDetail.htm?&Period=200812&DepPort=DXB&VIti=VI_7_DXB_S_F0B0H0_DXB_MCT_FUJ_AUH_BAH_DXB

 
Its a very confined waterway with numerous Navy's operating there. It is possible however unlikely, it would be suicidal.
 
Thanks, Ex-Dragoon. I'm asking because members of my family will be taking that cruise.
 
For piece of mind you may want to suggest to them to get in touch with the company they are doing the cruise with and asking them what security measures they have in place to prevent or deter a pirate attack.
 
Reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from The Associated Press

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gB7YMEDuCwwY9ncDOtPAkEI4-H2wD94QQC580

US cruise ship outruns Somali pirates' guns
By ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY


NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The luxury American cruise ship steaming across the Gulf of Aden with hundreds of well-heeled tourists just might have been too much for Somali pirates to resist.

But the six bandits, riding in two skiffs and firing rifle shots at the gleaming ship, were outrun in minutes when the captain of M/S Nautica gunned the engine and sped away, a spokesman for the company said Tuesday.

Still, the implications had the pirates hijacked the ship added a new dimension to the piracy scourge, as NATO foreign ministers groped for solutions at a meeting in Brussels and the United Nations extended an international piracy-fighting mandate for another year.

The potential for massive ransom payments from the families of hundreds of rich tourists may encourage similar attempts, especially following the successful capture of a Ukrainian cargo ship laden with tanks and a Saudi oil tanker carrying $100 million in crude.

And the brazen attack also raises questions: What was a cruise ship doing in the pirate-infested waters of the Gulf of Aden? How many such targets are sailing these seas, and how can they be protected?

Even the pirates' motives were in question: they could simply have been testing the defenses of the massive ship, rather than making a real effort to hijack it.

Sunday's attack on the M/S Nautica, which was reported Tuesday, comes several weeks after a NATO mission served mainly to underscore the impotence of the world community. A handful of Western ships can do little to prevent attacks in a vast sea, and without the right to board hijacked vessels, they can only watch as the booty is towed to port.

"It is very fortunate that the liner managed to escape," said Noel Choong, who heads the International Maritime Bureau's piracy reporting center in Malaysia, urging all ships to remain vigilant.

Some of the world's leading cruise companies said Tuesday they are considering changing their itineraries to avoid going near the coast of Somalia following news of the weekend attack.

Cunard's public relations manager Eric Flounders said the company has two liners, the Queen Mary 2 and Queen Victoria, scheduled to go through the Gulf of Aden in March but added the company "will obviously consider changing the itinerary" should the situation not improve.

Spokeswoman Michele Andjel said P&O Cruises is considering whether to reroute the Arcadia, which is due around the Gulf of Aden in January.

Lt. Nathan Christensen, a Bahrain-based spokesman for the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, said 21,000 ships cross the Gulf of Aden every year, but he did not know how many cruise liners are included in that figure. The gulf links the Mediterranean Sea, the Suez Canal and the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean.

"We are not advising ships to go a different way, but we do advise to go through the international corridor within the Gulf of Aden," Christensen said, referring to a security corridor patrolled by the international coalition.

Pirates have attacked about 100 ships off the Somali coast this year and hijacked 40 vessels. They still hold 14 ships along with more than 250 crew members, according to maritime officials.

NATO said an Italian destroyer prevented five cargo ships from being hijacked Tuesday in the Gulf of Aden by blocking the small pirate boats from the ships and using a helicopter to disperse them.

The Nautica is not the first pleasure boat to be attacked.

The luxury yacht Le Ponant was attacked earlier this year, and pirates opened fire in 2005 on the Seabourn Spirit off the Somali coast. The cruise ship evaded capture by using its speed and a long-range acoustic device that blasted a painful wave of sound at the pirates.

The Nautica also escaped by speeding up as two small pirate skiffs tried to close in, said Tim Rubacky, a spokesman for Oceania Cruises, Inc., which owns the Nautica. He said one skiff made it within 300 yards (275 meters) of the cruise ship and fired eight rifle shots at the vessel before trailing off.

"When the pirates were sighted, the captain went on the public address system and asked passengers to remain in the interior spaces of the ship and wait until he gave further instructions," Rubacky said. "Within five minutes, it was over."

He said the ship still plans to return through the Gulf of Aden.

"We believe this was an isolated incident," he said. "M/S Nautica is well-equipped to deal with these situations and the crew is well-trained."

However, Rubacky would not comment on the crew's training or whether the ship had weapons or other devices to help fight off a hijacking.

The Nautica was on a 32-day cruise from Rome to Singapore, with stops at ports in Italy, Egypt, Oman, Dubai, India, Malaysia and Thailand, according to Oceania's Web site. Choong said the ship was carrying 656 passengers and 399 crew members.

The liner arrived in the southern Oman port of Salalah on Monday morning, and passengers toured the city before leaving for the capital, Muscat, that evening, an Oman tourism official said.

In New York on Tuesday, the U.N. Security Council extended for another year its authorization for countries to enter Somalia's territorial waters, with advance notice, and use "all necessary means" to stop piracy and armed robbery at sea.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is expected to address the Security Council on the subject of piracy at a followup session Dec. 16.

Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991, and pirates have taken advantage of the country's lawlessness to launch attacks on foreign shipping from the Somali coast.

In two of the most daring attacks, pirates seized a Ukrainian freighter loaded with 33 battle tanks and other heavy weapons in September and captured the Saudi oil tanker on Nov. 15.

On Tuesday, a Somali pirate spokesman said his group will release the Ukrainian ship and crew within the next two days after a ransom is paid.

Sugule Ali told The Associated Press by satellite phone on Tuesday that a ransom agreement had been reached, but would not say how much. The pirates had originally asked for $20 million when they hijacked the MV Faina.

"Once we receive this payment, we will also make sure that all our colleagues on ship reach land safely, then the release will take place," Ali said.

Associated Press writers Katharine Houreld in Nairobi, Kenya, Pan Pylas in London, Carley Petesch in New York, John Heilprin at the United Nations, Barbara Surk in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Eileen Ng in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and Saeed al-Nahdy in Muscat, Oman, contributed to this report.
 
If the attempted hijacking/capture of a cruise ship doesn't send a message to the powers that be, they need their tail ends kicked. All the chatter about pirates "rights" and "non-lethal" means to deter these potentially murderous criminals has to go on the shelf. In the short term, any one attempting to pull this stunt off should end up as shark food. :skull:
In the long term, the rogue states who invite this type of criminal must be dealt with as well. Only then can we talk about "rights" and "non-lethal" means.
 
Pirates free Yemeni cargo ship, no ransom paid
http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnL3060450.html
Wed 3 Dec 2008, 12:50 GMT

By Abdiqani Hassan

GAROWE, Somalia, Dec 3 (Reuters) - Somali pirates have freed a Yemeni cargo ship they seized last week after successful talks between regional authorities, clan elders and the gunmen, a local official said on Wednesday.

A surge in attacks at sea this year in the busy Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean off Somalia has pushed up insurance costs, brought the gangs tens of millions of dollars in ransoms, and prompted foreign warships to rush to the area.

"The Yemeni ship was released last night after long discussions," Ali Abdi Aware, state minister of Somalia's northern Puntland province, told Reuters. "It left Eyl and is heading to Yemen. The crew are safe and no ransom was paid."

The MV Amani, owned by Yemeni shipping firm Abu Talal, has seven sailors on board. It was seized on Nov. 25 as it carried 507 tonnes of steel from Yemen's Mukalla port to Socotra Island.

Eyl is a remote former fishing village on the Puntland coast that has become a well-defended base for the pirates.

There have been nearly 100 attacks in Somali waters this year, despite the presence of several foreign warships. The sea gangs are holding about a dozen ships and nearly 300 crew.

Amomg the captured vessels are a Saudi supertanker loaded with $100 million of crude oil, the Sirius Star, and a Ukrainian cargo ship carrying some 30 Soviet-era tanks, the MV Faina.

On Tuesday, the U.N. Security Council renewed its authorisation for countries to use military force against the gunmen operating off the anarchic Horn of Africa nation.

FIGHTING ONSHORE

The resolution extended for one year the right of nations with permission from Somalia's interim government to enter Somali waters to pursue and attack pirates. The U.S.-drafted text was adopted unanimously by the 15-nation council.

France's U.N. ambassador, Jean-Maurice Ripert, said the move sent a very strong signal and would allow the European Union to begin an air and naval operation off Somalia on Dec. 8.

That mission is expected to involve five to six ships at any given time, plus maritime surveillance aircraft.

Egypt is willing to take part in a U.N. force to tackle piracy "at any time", a cabinet spokesman said.

A Greek ship freed by the pirates last week arrived in Mombasa, Kenya, on Wednesday. The MV Centauri was carrying salt and was hijacked in September. It was released on Nov. 28.

All its 26 Filipino crew members were safe but shaken.

"Although they provided us food, the sound of the cocking guns and sight of them being pointed at us was a horrifying experience," said junior officer Joland Besana. "Those were torturous and painful days that we'll not forget very soon."

The number of attacks at sea has increased this year as chaos has mounted onshore. Islamist rebels have been fighting the deeply divided interim government since the start of last year and have been advancing on the capital Mogadishu.

But the Islamists are also split. At least three people were killed on Tuesday in the central town of Gurael as a moderate faction battled hardliners from al Shabaab, which Washington has listed as a terrorist group with links to al Qaeda.

Residents said the battle started after al Shabaab fighters arrested a Koranic teacher aligned with the moderate faction.

"We are known to be Islamic scholars, but al Shabaab is forcing us to shoulder our guns," Sheikh Hussein Aden, a member of the moderate group, told Reuters by phone from Gurael.

"We are warning these pseudo-Muslims of al Shabaab to stop what they are doing or it will be a nationwide war."

(Additional reporting by Abdi Sheikh in Mogadishu, Celestine Achieng in Mombasa and Wangui Kanina in Nairobi; Writing by Daniel Wallis)
 
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