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Africa Horn
Danish navy frees hostages from pirates off Somalia
2012-04-15
[Shabelle] The Danish navy captured 16 Somali pirates and freed 12 captives when it intercepted a "mothership" vessel off the Horn of Africa, it said on Thursday.

The Danish warship Absalon, serving in NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A cautionary tale of cost-benefit analysis....
's counter-piracy mission Ocean Shield, stopped the vessel off the east coast of Somalia on Wednesday, boarded it without resistance, placed in long-term storage the suspected Somali pirates and found the hostages.

"The operation was carried out without use of armed force," the Danish navy command said in a statement.

"As the Absalon approached the ship and hailed it, they surrendered right away," navy front man Mikael Bill said.

Held by the pirates were three Iranians and nine Pak hostages, the original crew of the vessel, a Jelbut-type fishing boat seized by pirates about a month ago, Bill said.

The navy calls such a boat a "pirate mothership" because it is big enough to operate on the high seas and serve as a support vessel, carrying equipment for pirates who tend to use small skiffs to approach and board ships.

The hostages were on their way home on Thursday after giving testimony, but the suspected pirates will remain held aboard the Absalon until Denmark determines if it can hand the pirates over to a country in the region for prosecution, Bill said.

It was the second time in just month-and-a-half that the Absalon placed in long-term storage pirates and freed hostages offSomalia.

At the end of February, the Danish navy ship opened fire on a suspected pirate vessel which disobeyed orders to stop, killing two hostages but freeing 16 others and capturing 17 suspected pirates.

Piracy is rife off the Horn of Africa, disrupting important shipping lanes between Europe andAsia, putting seamen, vessels and cargoes at risk, and costing shipping companies huge sums to protect themselves.

It has been a huge problem as pirates from lawless, poverty-strickenSomaliaseek ransoms to release ships and hostages.

Although anti-piracy operations have succeeded in reducing the numbers of vessels and hostages taken in the past few years, efforts to stamp out piracy are hampered by the unwillingness of many countries to prosecute captured pirates in their courts.

The problem of finding courts to try pirates stems partly from a lack of a functioning judicial system and prisons inSomalia, but also reluctance by other countries to receive captured pirates.

Most European countries, includingDenmark, have been unwilling to bring suspects from eastAfricato their jails and courts, which means navies engaged in anti-piracy missions often must release captured pirates without prosecution.
Posted by:Fred

#11  Tie ropes to them and throw them over the bow. Measure the ropes to ensure they hang around the props. When someone asks what you are doing, scream at them that their islamaphobia is showing.
Posted by: Silentbrick - Halliburton Lost Drill Bit Division   2012-04-15 22:26  

#10  Why did the pirates give up without a fight?
I know! I know!
The Danes had one of those dragon thingies on the bow.
Posted by: Richard Aubrey   2012-04-15 21:40  

#9  And the USS Gabriel Gifford. Nothing against Ms. Gifford, but she did nothing heroic, all she did was get shot by a madman*.


*Yes, I know "alleged" madman.
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia   2012-04-15 17:05  

#8  I don't think the US or any of its citizens has any right to complain about the Absalon's name.
Right now we have the USS Murtha and the USS Jimmah Carter. I'd take a bishop over these two anyday.
Posted by: USN, Ret.   2012-04-15 17:00  

#7  Were any skeggöxes used?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2012-04-15 14:44  

#6  Lionel? *ahem*
Anchorman?
Posted by: Frank G   2012-04-15 13:58  

#5  I don't think the US or any of its citizens has any right to complain about the Absalon's name. When we tried to build a version of it we wound up trading away the ship's ability to _do_ anything for a 45 knot sprint speed. Oh, and our 45 knot target cost twice as much as well.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2012-04-15 13:13  

#4  kinds spoiled it for me.. a warship named after a Bishop... what's wrong with "Thor's Hammer" or something like? I seem to remember Norway naming some small missle boats after Odin's ravens....
Posted by: Lionel Spimble1621   2012-04-15 13:09  

#3  From Wikipedia: "The two ships in the Absalon class, named after Danish archbishop and statesman Absalon, received full operational status in 2007."
Interesting that the most successful ships against Islamic piracy are named after an archbishop!
Posted by: SLindsey   2012-04-15 11:04  

#2  Well, we can only hope that some of these incidents are never reported ...

Posted by: crosspatch   2012-04-15 01:19  

#1  but the suspected pirates will remain held aboard the Absalon until Denmark determines if it can hand the pirates over to a country in the region for prosecution, Bill said.

Y'know, I've been to sea. It can be very dangerous, especially at night. I mean, a guy goes for a walk, and Splash! he falls overboard. If the lookout doesn't see him, he may be shark food before they even know he's gone. It could happen to several of the pirates, since they aren't familiar with the ship and all.

Of course, if the Absalon had yard arms, they could solve the problem very quickly...
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia   2012-04-15 00:33  

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