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15 Indians on board hijacked ship

Last Updated : 10 November 2009, 19:37 IST
Last Updated : 10 November 2009, 19:37 IST

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A group of Somali businessmen called the Juba General Trading Company had hired the al-Mizan to carry cargo from the United Arab Emirates to Mogadishu, said Abdirisaq Abdulkadir, the head of the consortium. Abdulkadir said there are 15 Indians, two Pakistanis and a Somali on board. He denied media reports that the ship is carrying weapons.

“The ship was carrying 3,000 tonnes of general business materials,” he said. “It set out from Dubai on October 24. We were expecting it on November 6 or 7 but it did not arrive.”

When the consortium called the ship, he said, a pirate answered the phone and said it had been hijacked.

A man who answered a satellite phone number provided by Abdulkadir on Tuesday identified himself as a pirate and said the bandits were demanding a $ 3 million ransom. The man refused to give his name for fear of arrest. He said the ship was captured 10 days ago about 60 miles off the Somali coast.

The latest capture means Somali pirates are holding 11 ships with more than 200 people held as hostage, including a British couple, seized from their personal yacht late last month.

The high-seas hijackings have increased after the recent end of the monsoon season despite an international armada of warships deployed by the United States, the European Union, Nato, Japan, South Korea and China to patrol the region. US drones launched from nearby Seychelles are also patrolling for pirates. Somalia’s lawless 3,000-kilometre coastline provides a perfect haven for pirates to prey on ships heading for the Gulf of Aden, one of the world’s busiest shipping routes.

They use larger vessels as “mother ships” to tow their small, fast speedboats to attack ships up to 1600 kilometres from shore. Last year they seized more than 40 vessels.

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Published 10 November 2009, 19:37 IST

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