
Friday, April 11, 2008
By Crispian Balmer
French officials said the owners of the yacht paid a ransom to obtain the freedom of the crew and as soon as it was clear they were all safe, the commandos went into action aboard helicopters to track down the pirates.
A district commissioner in Somalia told Reuters five local people had died in the attack, but the French military denied killing anyone in the daylight raid.
"It was an intervention, not a pulverisation," said General Jean-Louis Georgelin, head of the armed forces general staff.
"When we captured the pirates we also recovered some interesting bags," he said, making clear some - although not all - of the ransom had been recovered in the raid.
He declined to say how much money had been paid over by the ship's owners and said no public money was involved.
Georgelin said the French military tracked the pirates, believed to be Somali fishermen, after they made landfall and moved in when they saw some of the gang getting away in a car.
A sniper in one helicopter shot out the car engine while another helicopter dropped off three elite French soldiers who captured the six pirates and hauled them off to French navy helicopter carrier waiting off the Somali coast.
"It is the first time an act of piracy in this area has been resolved so quickly ... and it is also the first time that some of the pirates have been apprehended," Admiral Edouard Guillard told a news conference in Paris.
French officials said the pirates, believed to be Somali fishermen, would be tried in France. They said Paris would also seek much tougher UN action against maritime piracy.
About 12 pirates grabbed the three-masted yacht, the Ponant, on Friday 850km out to sea in the Gulf of Aden. They then sailed the boat to the Somali coast, eventually mooring the vessel at Garaad, near the town of Eyl.
The French navy sent two boats to the area, with four or five helicopters on board and about 50 commandos. A French admiral was also parachuted into the sea and picked up by the task force to help lead the operation.
The foreign ministry said the crew, 22 of whom are French, would be repatriated as soon as possible. Most of the other crew members came from Ukraine and the Philippines.
General Georgelin said President Nicolas Sarkozy made clear he wanted all the hostages released without harm, but added the military would "probably" have intervened if the pirates had tried to split up the group or taken them off the boat.
The commando raid was only sanctioned once all the hostages were safely aboard the Jeanne D'Arc helicopter carrier.
Piracy is lucrative off lawless Somalia and most kidnappers treat their captives well in anticipation of a good ransom.
France said it would present new anti-piracy measures to fellow members of the UN security council next week aimed at toughening the war against sea banditry.
"This phenomenon is increasing, with the pirates becoming ever better equipped and organised," said Jean-David Levitte, Sarkozy's chief diplomatic adviser.
"We are confronted by a real, real threat," he said, adding that over the last 10 years 3,200 sailors had been kidnapped by pirates, 500 injured and 160 killed.
He said countries such as Somalia that had a problem with piracy needed to open their seas to international naval patrols and countries with strong navies, such as France and Britain, needed to set up counter-piracy units.
Source: Reuters, April 11, 2008