Pirates free hostages off Nigeria, Somalia
Turkish, French boats released, owners say
Associated Press
Thursday, January 08, 2009
Paris —- Pirates freed 20 hostages aboard a Turkish freighter commandeered off the Somali coast as nine captives on a French boat were released off southern Nigeria, the boat owners said Wednesday.
The Yasa Holding Co. said pirates freed the Yasa Neslihan freighter Tuesday after being paid a ransom. The Turkish ship was seized Oct. 29 in the Gulf of Aden, which connects the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean near Somalia.
“They asked for ransom and it has been paid,” company spokesman Fehmi Ulgener said. He refused to disclose the amount. “All the crew members are fine, and their morale is high.”
Piracy has soared off Somalia, which is caught up in an Islamic insurgency and has no functioning government, with more than 100 vessels attacked around the Gulf of Aden in 2008.
Pirates also have been active off Nigeria, where pirate attacks and hostage-taking have been closely intertwined with militants pressing the Nigerian government to send more oil revenues to the southern oil region in Africa’s biggest crude producer.
Nine hostages and a French boat seized by pirates off Nigeria’s southern coast were freed safely early Wednesday, the boat’s French owner, Bourbon, said.
A statement from the company said the hostages, all crew members, were in good health and would return to their families. It provided no details of how the group and boat, the Bourbon Leda, were freed or whether any ransom was paid.
Bourbon, which provides specialist boats for the oil and gas industry, thanked the Nigerian authorities for their cooperation.
Pirates hijacked the Bourbon Leda on Sunday with five Nigerians, two Ghanaians, one Cameroonian and one Indonesian aboard.
International efforts to fight piracy have mounted in recent months off Somalia. More than a dozen ships with some 200 crew members are still in the hands of pirates, according to the International Maritime Bureau.
More than a dozen warships are guarding Somalia’s waters, but they are spread thin across some of the world’s busiest shipping lanes. Countries including the U.S., Britain, China, France, Germany and Iran have naval forces off the Somali coast or on their way there.
Japan is considering whether to allow its naval vessels to join the international patrols, a newspaper reported Wednesday.
The government of Prime Minister Taro Aso intends to submit legislation during parliament’s current session, which ends in March, the Yomiuri newspaper reported.
Japan’s military is strictly limited to defensive activities by the country’s postwar constitution, and critics say sending ships to global hot spots could lead to problems if they come under attack or must assist friendly countries’ vessels.



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