Indian navy sinks suspected pirate 'mother ship'
NEW DELHI An Indian naval vessel sank
a suspected pirate "mother
ship"
in the
Gulf of Aden
and chased two attack boats into the night, officials said Wednesday, as
separate bands of brigands seized Thai and Iranian ships in the lawless
seas.
A multinational naval force has increased patrols in the waters between
the
Arabian Peninsula
and the
Horn of Africa,
where pirates have grown bolder and more violent. The force scored a
rare success Tuesday when the Indian warship, operating off the coast of
Oman, stopped a ship similar to a pirate vessel described in numerous
bulletins. The Indian navy said the pirates fired on the INS Tabar after
the officers asked to search it.
"Pirates were seen roaming on the upper deck of this vessel with guns
and
rocket propelled grenade launchers," said a
statement from the
Indian navy.
Indian forces fired back, sparking fires and a series of onboard blasts
possibly due to exploding ammunition and destroying the ship.
They chased one of two speedboats shadowing the larger ship. One was
later found abandoned. The other escaped, according to the statement.
Larger "mother
ships"
are often used to take gangs of pirates and smaller attack boats into
deep water, and can be used as mobile bases to
attack
merchant vessels.
Last week,
Indian navy commandos
operating from a warship foiled a pirate attempt to hijack a ship in the
Gulf of Aden. The navy said an armed helicopter with marine commandos
prevented the pirates from boarding and hijacking the
Indian merchant vessel.
Separate bands of pirates also seized a Thai ship with 16 crew members
and an Iranian cargo vessel with a crew of 25 in the Gulf of Aden, where
Somalia-based pirates appear to be attacking ships at will, said Noel
Choong of the International Maritime Bureau's piracy reporting center in
Malaysia.
"It's getting out of control," Choong said.
Tuesday's hijackings raised to eight the number of ships hijacked this
week alone, he said. Since the beginning of the year, 39 ships have been
hijacked in the Gulf of Aden, out of 95 attacked.
"The criminal activities are flourishing because the risks are low and
the rewards are extremely high," Choong said.
Once, the pirates mainly roamed the waters off the Somali coast, but now
they have spread in every direction and are targeting ships further at
sea, according to Choong.
He said 17 vessels remain in the hands of pirates along with more than
300 crew members, including a Ukrainian ship loaded with weapons and a
Saudi Arabian supertanker carrying $100 million in crude.
Despite the stepped-up patrols, the attacks have continued unabated off
Somalia, which is caught up in an Islamic insurgency and has had no
functioning government since 1991. Pirates have generally released ships
they have seized after ransoms are paid.
NATO has three warships in the Gulf of Aden and the
U.S. Navy's
Bahrain-based 5th Fleet also has ships in the region.
But
U.S. Navy Commander Jane Campbell
of the 5th Fleet said naval patrols simply cannot prevent attacks given
the vastness of the sea and the 21,000 vessels passing through the Gulf
of Aden every year.
"Given the size of the area and given the fact that we do not have naval
assets either ships or airplanes to be everywhere with every single
ship" it would be virtually impossible to prevent every attack, she
said.
The Gulf of Aden connects to the Red Sea, which in turn is linked to the
Mediterranean by the
Suez Canal. The route is thousands of miles and many days
shorter than going around the Cape of Good Hope off the southern tip of
Africa.
The Thai boat, which was flying a flag from the tiny Pacific nation of
Kiribati but operated out of
Thailand,
made a distress call as it was being chased by pirates in two
speedboats, but the phone connection was cut off midway.
Wicharn Sirichaiekawat, manager of Sirichai Fisheries Co., Ltd. told The
Associated Press that the ship, the "Ekawat Nava 5," was headed from
Oman to
Yemen
to deliver fishing equipment.
"We have not heard from them since so we don't know what the demands
are," Wicharn said. "We have informed the families of the crew but right
now, we don't have much more information to give them either."
Of the 16 crew members, Wicharn said 15 are Thai and one is Cambodian.
The Iranian carrier was flying a Hong Kong flag but operated by the
Islamic Republic of Iran
Shipping Lines.
On Tuesday, a major Norwegian shipping group,
Odfjell
SE, ordered its more than 90 tankers to sail around Africa rather than
use the Suez Canal after the seizure of the Saudi tanker Saturday.
"We will no longer expose our crew to the risk of being hijacked and
held for ransom by pirates in the Gulf of Aden," said Terje Storeng,
Odfjell's president and chief executive.
Saudi Arabia,
the world's leading oil producer, has condemned the hijacking and said
it will join the international fight against piracy. Despite the fact
that its government barely works, Somali officials vowed to try to
rescue the ship by force if necessary.
The supertanker, the MV Sirius Star, was anchored Tuesday close to
Harardhere, the main pirates' den on the Somali
coast, with a full load of 2 million barrels of oil and 25 crew members.