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Africa Horn
'Biggest suspect' in ship piracy arrested
2008-10-03
Kenyan police have arrested the 'biggest suspect' in the recent piracy case off Somali coast which involved a 'weapon-laden' Ukrainian ship. The director of the East Africa Seafarers Assistance Programme's branch in Kenya, Andrew Mwangura, has been named the 'biggest suspect' in the case by the Kenyan police who placed him under arrest on Wednesday, a Press TV correspondent reported.

Mwangura is suspected of collusion with the Somali pirates in their most recent hijacking during which they seized the 'Kenya-bound' Ukrainian ship, the Faina.

The arrest reportedly follows accusations of connivance directed at Mwangura by the Faina's owner company. The police, themselves, said they suspected Mwangura having found him to be the first to inform the media outlets of the hijackings near Somalia's coastal region of Puntland where the pirates' presence has complicated naval transportation. He is, as well, said to have been at liberty to contact the Faina's crew and is said to have requested large sums of money from them.

The vessel purportedly has around 100 pieces of military hardware on board including tanks, anti-aircraft missiles and automatic weapons.

Mwangura is to be questioned regarding his allegations that the ship was heading for Sudan and not Kenya. Our correspondent, last Friday, quoted a number of Somali politicians as charging that the ship was originally taking the weapons to the pirates.

While the vessels carrying WFP food aid are heavily guarded, it is hard to believe that the Kenyan authorities did not seek more protection for the consignments destined for their country knowing that the Somali pirates could pose a great threat to it, they added. The US, whose warship is keeping a close eye on the pirates' movements in the area, on the other hand, corroborates the claims that the ship was destined for Sudan.
Posted by:Fred

#8  Wonder what the RAB'S TAD budget looks like? These crimelords need to be introduced to the 3am interrogation.
Posted by: USN,Ret.   2008-10-03 20:42  

#7  Sounds possibly like he ticked off the wrong people:

The gangs, [Mwangura] says, are masterminded by crimelords in Dubai and Nairobi who monitor shipping routes for lucrative targets. They pass directions on to as many as five pirate gangs who pay a "licence fee" to Somali politicians or clan elders.
Posted by: Pappy   2008-10-03 18:11  

#6  Are they going to make him walk the plank?
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-10-03 14:15  

#5  This is pretty laffo hilarious. Andrew Mwangura is cited in just about every Somali piracy news article in the past couple of years.
Posted by: Plastic Snoopy   2008-10-03 14:05  

#4  The police, themselves, said they suspected Mwangura having found him to be the first to inform the media outlets

Wondered why the pirates had the AP on the line.
Posted by: Danielle   2008-10-03 12:27  

#3  I posted the Somalia piracy incident map the other day. It shows the incidents and the havens. Strafe the boats and ports as a free introductory offer. More incidents, level the place. End of story. We have the means, not the will. Remember the Barbary pirates.
Posted by: Alaska Paul    2008-10-03 11:27  

#2  Maybe this is the staw that breaks the camel's back. I hope they use this incident to dismantle the pirates' organization.
Posted by: Chunky Elmaviling9135   2008-10-03 09:43  

#1  Pirates need shore facilities, both for themselves and their ships, and for moving the loot.
Has to start someplace.

It's getting worse. There was a raid on a town in Nigeria recently, going after banks. Colonial towns with ocean connections had fortifications against pirates, not necessarily on account of war with another nation.
Posted by: Richard Aubrey   2008-10-03 08:19  

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