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Africa Horn |
Somali pirates return, adding to global shipping crisis |
2024-03-24 |
[ShabelleMedia] As a speed boat carrying more than a dozen ![]() No one reached them in time. The pirates clambered aboard the Abdullah, firing warning shots and taking the captain and second officer hostage, Chief Officer Atiq Ullah Khan said in an audio message to the ship’s owners. "By the grace of Allah no one has been harmed so far," Khan said in the message, recorded before the pirates took the crew’s phones. The company shared the recording with Rooters. A week later, the Abdullah is anchored off the coast of Somalia, the latest victim of a resurgence of piracy that international navies thought they had brought under control. The raids are piling risks and costs onto shipping companies also contending with repeated drone and missile strikes by Yemen ...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of... ’s Iran's Houthi sock puppets ![]() Believing Youth. Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi is said to be the spiritual leader of the group and most of the military leaders are his relatives. The legitimate Yemeni government has accused the them of having ties to the Iranian government. Honest they did. The group has managed to gain control over all of Saada Governorate and parts of Amran, Al Jawf and Hajjah Governorates. Its slogan is God is Great, Death to America™, Death to Israel, a curse on the JewsThey like shooting off... ummm... missiles that they would have us believe they make at home in their basements. On the plus side, they did murder Ali Abdullah Saleh, which was the only way the country was ever going to be rid of him... militia in the Red Sea and other nearby waters. More than 20 attempted hijackings since November have driven up prices for armed security guards and insurance coverage and raised the spectre of possible ransom payments, according to five industry representatives. Two Somali gang members told Rooters they were taking advantage of the distraction provided by Houthi strikes several hundred nautical miles to the north to get back into piracy after lying dormant for nearly a decade. "They took this chance because the international naval forces that operate off the coast of Somalia reduced their operations," said a pirate financier who goes by the alias Ismail Isse and said he helped fund the hijacking of another bulk carrier in December. He spoke to Rooters by phone from Hul Anod, a coastal area in Somalia’s semi-autonomous northeastern region of Puntland ...a region in northeastern Somalia, centered on Garowe in the Nugaal province. Its leaders declared the territory an autonomous state in 1998. Puntland and the equally autonomous Somaliland seem to have avoided the clan rivalries and warlordism that have typified the rest of Somalia, which puts both places high on the list for Islamic subversion... where the ship, the Ruen, was held for weeks. |
Posted by:trailing wife |
#5 Exactly. If they didn't "come back" from their adventures this shit would stop |
Posted by: Frank G 2024-03-24 20:41 |
#4 Contract it out with letters of mark and reprisal. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2024-03-24 20:08 |
#3 A bunch of idiots with small arms in small boats. They could be wiped out completely every time, but the west doesn't have a collective stomach for the optics. Of course, if media wasn't allowed to report on it and the Pentagone wasn't choc-a-bloc with idiots who want to bask in media attention any chance they get, it could be done thoroughly and quietly. |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2024-03-24 19:27 |
#2 I watched an interview with Eric Prince who described how they stopped the piracy the first time. The pirate bases are very isolated geographically. He coordinated a paramilitary campaign that cut their logistics. The geography remains the same. |
Posted by: Super Hose 2024-03-24 19:00 |
#1 Apparently some areas of Somalia need to be depopulated. Again. |
Posted by: Frank G 2024-03-24 09:28 |