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Africa Horn |
Somali pirates hijack South Korean ship |
2011-04-22 |
[Iran Press TV] ![]() The Panamanian-registered 75,000-ton Hanjin Tianjin ship was sailing from Spain to Singapore on Thursday morning when pirates seized it several hundred kilometers off the Somali coast, a Press TV correspondent reported. The vessel has a crew of fourteen South Korean and six Indonesian nationals. Somali pirates are reportedly taking the hijacked South Korean ship to Harardhere, a town in the Mudug province of central Somalia. The waters off the Indian Ocean coast of Somalia are considered the most dangerous in the world for persistent piracy attempts in the area. Attacks by the heavily armed Somali pirates in speedboats have prompted some of the world's largest shipping firms to switch routes from the Suez Canal and send cargo vessels around southern Africa, causing a hike in shipping costs. Somalia does not have a functional government, and the Transitional Federal Government lacks control beyond the capital city Mogadishu. |
Posted by:Fred |
#1 There are only so many ports. A nice dose of naval mining would go a long way to obstruct traffic. If you have too little nerve to consider that, there are a lot of mothballed vessels that could be scuttled in those same traffic lanes which the locals would be unable to remove. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2011-04-22 23:27 |