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Africa Horn
Somalis want tough action against pirates captured by French troops
2008-04-18
Somalis applauded on Thursday the French troops who captured six pirates, wretched with rampant piracy plaguing their Horn of Africa country.
"Yay! Hurray! String 'em up!"
The Somalis, part of a group that stormed a French luxury yacht and held its 30 crew hostage for a week, were flown to France on Wednesday and are being questioned over the April 4 attack. "Pirates are terrorists and should be dealt with accordingly," Sheikh Osman Alasow, a Koranic teacher, told Reuters in the humid, coastal capital Mogadishu. "It would be good if the French commandos punish and force their captives to reveal the names and whereabouts of other pirates hiding in Somalia," he added.
Careful with that feather! You're about to knock me over!
Either a different clan, no cut of the boodle, or both, I'm guessing.
Spoilsport. Go ahead, disillusion me ...
Last week, French officials said France had the right to prosecute the pirates. An initial investigation opened on Monday into "boat hijacking, kidnapping and confinement in an organised gang with ransom payment" which carries a maximum life sentence.
They can't call it "piracy" or they'd have to string 'em up from the yardarm.
Meanwhile, Somalia's waters have become among the world's most perilous, despite calls for international action to patrol the shipping lanes. The Somali government, struggling to end an Islamist-led insurgency and assert its authority, has appealed for help to finance and train its own coast guard to protect waters plied by thousands of merchant ships sailing to the Cape of Good Hope every year.
Here's a job the Italians, Greeks and Spanish could do. French could let them use Djibouti as a base. Let the Euros police the waters.
"France has done a great job and it would be wise if other powerful countries would follow suit," said Adow Hussein, a 60-year-old khat dealer. "But the problem is some foreign countries ... encourage piracy by directly or indirectly by paying ransom."
Dang. Another voice of sweet reason. That's two in all of Somali.
Somali pirates often justify their actions as measures against illegal fishing and toxic dumping but with more than 30 attacks in 2007 alone -- many for ransom -- it is proving to be a lucrative trade. Hundreds of thousands of dollars are believed to have been paid to pirates in recent months in exchange for the safe return of vessels and their crew.

However, housewife Halima Abdi defended the pirates saying they were protecting the coastline from dumping. "They have hijacked ships, yes, but they have not made any trouble inside foreign countries. To imprison them would be an excuse for depriving us of our natural resources," she added.
Like piracy ...
Posted by:Fred

#4  so does martyrdom, I say we do both. Josey Wales-style: "Fish and sharks' gotta eat too"
Posted by: Frank G   2008-04-18 21:37  

#3  Of course, piracy has a long and (dis)honorable tradition in Muslim countries.
Posted by: Rambler in California   2008-04-18 21:34  

#2  Between Sheikh Alasow and the khat dealer Somalia seems to have more voices of sweet reason than England or Massachusetts.
Posted by: Glenmore   2008-04-18 05:45  

#1  Me eyebrows be trapt be'ind me 'ed.
Posted by: Gabby Cussworth   2008-04-18 00:38  

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