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Pirates are alive and well and setting new records

There are a lot of movies about pirates made. In reality though, pirates are becoming more of a problem than previously thought. Off of the coast of Somalia a supertanker that was filled with 2,000,000 gallons of oil was being kept by pirates who were awaiting a $3,000,000 ranson. Maybe the pirates wouldn’t have had to wait if the price of oil was still $100+ a barrel.

A Saudi-owned supertanker held by pirates off the coast of Somalia for two months has been released for a ransom of $3 million, according to one of the pirates and residents of Xarardheere, a pirate town on the Somali coast near where the tanker was being held.

The supertanker, about the length of an American Nimitz class aircraft carrier, was the largest ship known to have been seized by pirates, and it was fully loaded with two million barrels of oil.

The pirates were due to leave the ship after the money, paid by the ship’s owners, was received by the pirates on Friday, according to the pirates and residents, who later said that the ship had moved away from the coast where it had been anchored since November.

News agencies had reported that the pirates had originally asked for $25 million in ransom for the fully-laden oil tanker, known as the Sirius Star, but ”they have agreed on $3 million and the pirates will disembark tonight,” a pirate in Xarardheere who gave his name as Jama said.

He said he had spoken to the pirates who had gone to the ship to receive the ransom payment. The money had been paid in Kenya and reached the Somali pirates on a boat from Mombasa, Kenya, the pirates said.

The International Maritime Bureau in London, a clearinghouse for piracy information and maritime-safety issues, said it could not yet confirm that the pirates had released the tanker.

“We have not got confirmation of the release of this vessel,” a spokesman for the organization, Cyrus Mody, said. “The information that we have from the owner is that the vessel is not yet released.” The owner, Vela International Ltd., could not be immediately reached for comment.

But a regional maritime group confirmed the release. Andrew Mwangura, of the East African Seafarers Assistance program, based in the Kenyan port of Mombasa, was quoted by Reuters as saying: “The last batch of gunmen have disembarked from the Sirius Star. She is now steaming out to safe waters.”

The Sirius Star was seized in November by the group of armed pirates about 420 nautical miles off the coast of Somalia, in seas where pirates have struck with increasing audacity in recent months, hijacking other vessels, including a Ukrainian freighter laden with armaments. That vessel, the Faina, which was carrying 32 armored tanks and other heavy weapons, is still being held in the region.

Mr. Mody of the maritime bureau in London said there were currently 15 vessels being held by pirates off the coast of Somalia, involving 290 crew members.

Amid the increasingly frequent attacks, China said last month it would send naval ships to the Gulf of Aden to help in the fight against piracy there, the first modern deployment of Chinese warships outside the Pacific. And on Thursday, the United States Navy said that a new international naval force under American command would begin patrols to confront Somali pirates in the Horn of Africa.

As for the supertanker, Abdi Ahmed, a Xarardheere resident said, “the big fishes left Xarardheere on Thursday afternoon to the Sirius Star ship to get the ransom money and to set free the ship.”

The pirate who identified himself as Jama said he was waiting for his share of the ransom from his cohorts.

“When the pirates receive the money, they will divide in shares on the spot, so that they will disembark tonight from the ship with everyone’s share in pocket,” he said.

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Posted By: Michael Sharpe

News Category: International Retards

 

3 Responses to “Pirates are alive and well and setting new records”

  1. In this day of miniturization, the solution to the piracy problem seems obvious:
    -One covert GPS locator attached to ransom container
    -One GPS guided air to surface missile
    -Pirates leave vessel
    -Missle meets pirates
    -Great return on ransom investment.
    Okay, so it might only work this way a couple of times but I am sure there are even more creative ways to “GPS tag a Pirate”.

    Richard on 09 Jan 2009 at 10:29 pm
  2. Great article however, what is so hard above waiting for them to dis-embark and blowing them sky high through night vision or infrared detection at night? Or following them back to their Port and getting them, or 100 hundred other ways to do it. This problem is totally retarded, and I wonder why this is so difficult to figure out. You have to bomb them relentlessly at their camps, capture them, cut their heads off, stop all ships from leaving Somalia, stop all supplies to them, protect every ship for a while, and send mercenary special-ops in and assassinate them all. Not an easy task, but worth it.

    David Ash on 10 Jan 2009 at 5:32 am
  3. I think that David Ash’s statement that night vision detection should be used at night is fantastic.. I know that recently Jerome has been to the eye doctor regarding problems he has using his night vision equipment in the middle of the day.

    I’ve already written a strongly worded letter to Captain Jack Sparrow and refuse to see any more movies of his until he stops ransoming oil cargo ships.

    Michael on 14 Jan 2009 at 10:10 pm
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