Pirates hijack Saudi ship

Somali have pirates hijacked a Saudi-owned ship with 14 crew in the Gulf of Aden, a Kenyan maritime official said today.

Somali have pirates hijacked a Saudi-owned ship with 14 crew in the Gulf of Aden, a Kenyan maritime official said today.

Pirates said they had also seized a fishing vessel.

Andrew Mwangura of the East African Seafarers' Assistance Programme said the 5,136 deadweight tonne al Nisr al Saudi was seized on Monday and was now off the Somali coast.

Pirates also said they had captured a fishing vessel in the Indian Ocean, but no further details were immediately available.

Mr Mwangura said the Saudi tanker was on its way from Japan to Jeddah with one Greek and 13 Sri Lankan crew.

Emboldened by rising ransom payments, Somali pirates have stepped up attacks in recent months, making tens of millions of dollars by seizing vessels in the Indian Ocean and the busy Gulf of Aden shipping lanes.

The armed pirate gangs operate far out to sea and have managed to dodge naval warships deployed to combat their activities by casting their nets as far south as the Seychelles.

Foreign navies have been deployed off the Gulf of Aden since the start of 2009 and have operated convoys, as well as setting up a transit corridors through the most dangerous waters.

But their forces have been stretched over the vast expanses of water, including the Indian Ocean, leaving merchant vessels vulnerable.

Reuters

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