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Pirates move Saudi supertanker farther from coast
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Tuesday, November 25, 2008
By MOHAMED OLAD HASSAN Associated Press Writer

MOGADISHU, Somalia—Pirates have moved a Saudi supertanker loaded with crude oil farther out to sea after an extremist Islamic group vowed to fight the bandits because they seized a Muslim-owned vessel, witnesses said Tuesday.

Somali pirates seized the Sirius Star on Nov. 15 in their most audacious hijacking to date off the coast of this lawless country. The vessel is carrying 2 million barrels of crude oil worth about $100 million.

The British Broadcasting Corp. reported Tuesday that they contacted a pirate on board the Sirius Star who said the ship owner has not contacted them and that they have not yet set a ransom.

The BBC said the pirate identified himself as Daybad.

"We captured the ship for ransom, of course, but we don't have anybody reliable to talk to directly about it," Daybad said. The captain of the Sirius Star, Marek Nishky, told the BBC he and his crew have no complaint and have been allowed to talk to their families.

On Friday, al-Shabab—the Islamic group at the center of Somalia's deadly insurgency—vowed to fight the pirates.

Somali clan elder Abdisalan Khalif Ahmed said the ship moved Sunday to about 28 miles (45 kilometers) from its earlier location, putting it about 30 miles (50 kilometers) off the coast of the coastal village of Harardhere.

"Perhaps (the) pirates are afraid the Islamists in town will frustrate their efforts to resupply the ship," he told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

A security official in Yemen said Tuesday that Somali pirates who hijacked the Yemeni cargo ship Adina in the Arabian Sea last week were asking for a $2 million ransom to release the ship. The cargo is construction material. The official asked not to be named because he is not allowed to speak to the media.

The police chief of Yemen's Hadramout province, Ahmed Mohammad al-Hamedi, said the ship is owned by a Yemeni company but is carrying a foreign flag, which he would not specify. He said there were three Yemenis, three Somalis and two Panamanians on board. 

The Yemen ship was traveling between Mukalla, a port in southern Yemen, to the southern island of Suqutra, when it was hijacked.

Somalia, an impoverished nation caught up in an Islamic insurgency spearheaded by al-Shabab, has not had a functioning government since 1991.

There have been at least 96 pirate attacks so far this year in Somali waters, with 40 ships hijacked. Fifteen ships with nearly 300 crew are still in the hands of Somali pirates, who dock the hijacked vessels near the eastern and southern coast as they negotiate for ransom.

Shipping officials from around the world have called for a military blockade along Somalia's coast to intercept pirate vessels heading out to sea. The head of the International Association of Independent Tanker Owners, representing most of the world fleet, said Monday that stronger naval action—including aerial support—was necessary to battle rampant piracy in the Gulf of Aden near Somalia.

But NATO, which has four warships off the coast of Somalia, rejected a blockade.

U.S. Gen. John Craddock, NATO's supreme allied commander, said the alliance's mandate is solely to escort World Food Program ships to Somalia and to conduct anti-piracy patrols. NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said that a blockade of ports was "not contemplated by NATO."

In neighboring Kenya, the head of U.S. military operations in Africa said he had no evidence that Somali pirates are connected to al-Qaida, but said the allegations are "a concern we all would have."

Western governments have expressed concern that some pirate ransoms—some $30 million this year alone—could end up in the hands of extremists with links to terror groups in Somalia.

Associated Press writers Elizabeth A. Kennedy and Malkhadir M. Muhumed contributed to this report from Nairobi, Kenya.

Source: AP, November 25, 2008



 





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