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PILLAGING PIRATES
Malaysia: Pirates face death penalty

Pirates fire at chemical vessel off Nigeria: agency
Lagos (AFP) Feb 11, 2011 - Pirates in a fishing boat opened fire on a chemical vessel in a suspected robbery attempt off the coast of Nigeria, an international maritime agency said on Friday. The International Maritime Bureau said the sailors of the vessel spotted a fishing boat with about eight "armed robbers" making "suspicious movements" on Thursday. "Robbers opened fire while (they) attempted to board the tanker," forcing the crew to increase speed, said the agency, adding the pirates chased the tanker for one hour before they gave up.

The attack took place around 50 miles (80 kilometres) off Nigeria's largest city of Lagos. The country's navy later confirmed the attack adding its helicopters were searching for the tanker. "I can confirm the attack was launched on a tanker," Navy spokesman Aliyu Kabir said. Neither the maritime agency nor the Nigerian navy could identify the vessel or provide its country of origin.

A maritime risk analyst agency last month forecast that cash-driven piracy and militant attacks against oil installations were likely to increase this year in Nigeria's waters especially after the April elections. The IMB lists Nigerian waters among the most piracy prone in Africa along with other Gulf of Guinea countries such as Cameroon, in addition to Somalia. Most of the Nigerian attacks are aimed at kidnapping for ransom. The Greek coastguard said on Friday that two Greek freighter officers seized last month by an armed gang in the oil-producing Niger Delta region have been released unharmed.
by Staff Writers
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (UPI) Feb 11, 2011
Four suspected Somali pirates could face the death penalty if convicted by a Malaysian court of armed robbery and firing weapons at Malaysian defense forces.

The four are among seven people who were formally charged in a Malaysian court after the navy arrested them during a gun battle on board a hijacked chemical tanker Jan. 20.

The other three suspected pirates, aged around 15 years, won't face death sentences because of their age, Malaysian prosecutors said.

The navy took them to face prosecution in Malaysia. The navies of India and South Korea also recently took captured pirate suspects to their own countries for trial.

Last month, in separate incidents, the navies of South Korea and Malaysia boarded pirated ships and took control of the vessels after gun battles with the pirates.

In the Malaysian operation, the tanker Bunga Laurel was in the Gulf of Aden and bound for Singapore with a cargo of lubricating oil worth more than $10 million.

The Malaysian navy answered a distress call from the Malaysian-flagged vessel and arrived in time to do battle with armed pirates who had just boarded the vessel.

The crew of 23 was freed without harm but three of the seven suspected pirates were wounded.

However, during the South Korean operation, eight of the 13 suspected pirates on board a tanker were killed and the others taken prisoner. The ship's crew of 21 was safe but the captain was shot in the stomach by a pirate and was reported in stable condition.

The International Maritime Bureau welcomed the successful rescue operations but cautioned against navies engaging in armed assault of pirated ships.

"The IMB commends the robust actions of the South Korean navy and renews its call for greater naval action in the fight against this brand of maritime crime," IMB Director Pottengal Mukundan said.

"We recognize the risks posed to crew in actions of this type and advise that navies only give the orders after consultation with a vessel's owners and flag state."

In Mumbai, 28 suspected Somali pirates captured Sunday in the Indian Ocean were handed to police and will appear in court.

They were captured near the Lakshadweep Islands, off the coast of Kerala state, by an Indian coast guard vessel that had been tracking the Thai trawler Prantalay-11.

The coast guard attacked the ship, which had been hijacked in April, captured the armed pirates and freed the vessel's 24 fishermen. The pirates had demanded $9 million in ransom for the release of the fishermen and had been using the ship as a base for attacking other vessels.

The head the Indian coast guard, Inspector General S.P.S. Basra, warned that attacks by pirates off the Indian coast are increasingly violent.

"In the recent times, Somali pirates have mounted attacks within 250 to 300 nautical miles off the coast of India. The level of force used by pirates over that period has shown an exponential increase, as well as it is more brutal and lethal," he said.

Despite the efforts of the International Maritime Bureau, whose Piracy Reporting Center has headquarters in Kuala Lumpur, the organization is concerned about the increase in attacks and hostage taking.

Last year there were 445 recorded pirate attacks, a 10 percent increase on 2009. Pirates took 1,181 hostages, the highest number since the IMB began started monitoring the area around the Gulf of Aden in 1991.



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PILLAGING PIRATES
S.Korea navy kills Somali pirates, saves crew: military
Seoul (AFP) Jan 21, 2011
South Korean navy commandos Friday stormed a ship hijacked by Somali pirates in the Indian Ocean, rescuing all the 21 crew and killing eight pirates, military officials said. The SEAL special forces boarded the South Korean ship before dawn, freeing all the hostages and killing the pirates in cabin-to-cabin battles, they said. Five others were captured. "This operation demonstrated our g ... read more







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