
Saturday, February 27, 2010
"A ransom drop was successfully made for the release of the Greek owned Panama-flagged bulk carrier, Navios Apollon," the EU NAVFOR naval force said in a statement.
It was the second ransom drop to the pirates in two days, demonstrating the dilemma governments and companies are in over the need to recover their ships and crews and the fears of encouraging further piracy.
In both cases the amount of money handed over to the pirates was not given.
Almost immediately after the earlier ransom drop, a Singapore-flagged Indonesian chemical tanker and its 24-strong crew were released by the pirates, NAVFOR spokesman Commander John Harbour told AFP.
The pirates disappeared back to the shore of impoverished Somalia.
Britain on Monday denied blocking an independent negotiator from trying to agree a ransom for a British couple held hostage in Somalia, but warned any such payment would encourage more kidnaps.
Armed Somali pirates, using speedboats, seized the Greek freighter involved in the latest ransom drop in the Indian Ocean in late December while it was en route to Thailand .
The ship's captain is Greek and the crew is Filipino.
The EU statement said that "no requests for assistance have been made at this time" and NAVFOR was continuing to monitor the situation.
According to EU NAVFOR spokesman Harbour it normally takes up to 24 hours for pirates to release the ship and crew "after the money has been counted".
Somali pirates, targeting one of the world's busiest maritime trade routes, raked in an estimated 60 million dollars in ransoms last year.
They currently hold five vessels and some 120 seafarers, according to Harbour.
The EU NAVFOR mission is tasked with escorting merchant vessels carrying humanitarian aid and to protect vulnerable ships in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean.
Source: AFP