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Africa Horn |
'There was only ever going to be one winner' |
2010-04-16 |
![]() All six people on board were rescued and taken aboard the Ashland. The Ashland suffered no injuries or damage in the attack on Saturday morning. The Navy has taken at least 21 suspected pirates since March 31 in the violence-plagued waters off Somalia and nearby regions, where U.S. warships are part of an international anti-piracy flotilla.
In December, the Dutch government released 13 suspected Somali pirates after the European Union failed to find a country willing to prosecute them. One of the suspected pirates accused of attacking the U.S.-flagged merchant ship Maersk Alabama last year is facing trial in the United States. At the United Nations, Russia has introduced a draft resolution to the U.N. Security Council that calls for strengthening the international legal system to ensure captured Somali pirates do not escape punishment. In Turkey, a news agency reported Saturday that Somali pirates have abandoned a commandeered Turkish ship. The Dogan agency quoted Fatih Kabal, an official of Bergen Shipping based in Istanbul, as saying the pirates left the MV Yasin C, which was seized Wednesday 250 miles off the Kenyan coast. Kabal said the crew had locked themselves in the engine room and realized that the pirates had left the ship on Friday. He said crew members, who were unharmed, took the damaged ship to the Kenyan port of Mombasa. Meanwhile, the owner of a hijacked supertanker has begun negotiations for the ship's release, a South Korean Foreign Ministry official said on condition of anonymity, citing the sensitivity of the talks. Repeated calls to the vessel operator, South Korea-based Samho Shipping, seeking comment went unanswered on Saturday night. The vessel is owned by a Singaporean company. A South Korean naval destroyer that had been monitoring the ship began sailing away from the pirates Saturday and heading back toward the Gulf of Aden after the pirates warned the sailors not to come any closer. Authorities say Somali pirates hijacked the 300,000-ton Samho Dream in the Indian Ocean on April 4. The ship was transporting crude oil worth about $160 million from Iraq to the U.S. with a crew of 24 South Koreans and Filipinos. More than a dozen ships and their crew are believed to be currently held by pirates off the lawless coast of Somalia. |
Posted by:Fred |
#9 Why not hogtie them and hand them over to the hijacked crew and then leave? Maybe handing them over to the country with the financial interest that was at risk would be a good way to start. |
Posted by: gorb 2010-04-16 23:15 |
#8 Keelhauling still in the books? |
Posted by: OldSpook 2010-04-16 20:26 |
#7 drink up! |
Posted by: Frank G 2010-04-16 18:51 |
#6 Throw 'em out the window of an F-150 at 50,000 feets or hang them from the yardarm of a Q-ship. |
Posted by: Shipman 2010-04-16 18:41 |
#5 Why hang these scum,? if you do surely some video will surface and you ass is in a sling. Just strap a piece of iron to their ankles and "Allow" them to "Escape" over the side, NO VIDEO. Call it "Catch and release". |
Posted by: Redneck Jim 2010-04-16 12:48 |
#4 Named after my home town of Ashland, Kansas. |
Posted by: bman 2010-04-16 10:57 |
#3 In December, the Dutch government released 13 suspected Somali pirates after the European Union failed to find a country willing to prosecute them. Pathetic. How cowardly is the west now days. Just hang them from the yard arm or throw them over the side. |
Posted by: DarthVader 2010-04-16 10:11 |
#2 "The Ashland suffered no injuries or damage in the attack on Saturday morning." Correction: there were cases of pulled rib muscles in 3 Gunnys and a Chief who hurt them from laughing at the "pirates" under fire. |
Posted by: OldSpook 2010-04-16 01:09 |
#1 Wait for the USS Murtha to get into action; bet your ass that there will be killing in cold blood..... but then again, professional courtesy will probably result in letting the (other) pirates free..... |
Posted by: USN, Ret. 2010-04-16 00:20 |