Friday, April 15, 2011

Somali Pirates Stiff India On Hostage Ransom...They Get the Ransom, Release the Ship...But Keep the Hostages


I'm guessing that we are going to find out just how far you can push the government of India and it's special operations people in its military as a group of Somali pirates has decided that even after they were paid a multi-million dollar ransom to release an Indian ship and hostages...the Somalis released the ship and crew members who weren't Indian but hung onto the Indian hostages.

From the report at Breitbart:

In a move that could change the pirate-hostage equation, Somali pirates on Friday took in a multimillion dollar ransom, then released the ship and some of the crew but kept all the Indian crew members as hostages.

A pirate told The Associated Press the Indian crew members' hostage ordeal is being prolonged in retaliation for the arrests of more than 100 Somali pirates by the Indian Navy.

"We decided to keep the Indian because India is holding our colleagues," the pirate, Hassan Farah, said. "We released the other crew members who sailed away from our coast. We will keep these Indians until the Indians release our colleagues."

Farah said the pirates in the stronghold of Haradhere have taken that collective decision. The Indian hostages are to be moved to land.

A multimillion dollar ransom was paid for the ship Asphalt Venture, whose ownership is located in Mumbai, India. Pirates are receiving an average of $5 million to release ships and crew, and a ransom in that ballpark was believed to have been paid on Friday.

It wasn't immediately clear how many of the 15 crew members aboard the Asphalt Venture were Indian. The ship was hijacked in late September.

Friday's pirate action marks a major departure from the standard pirate business model of release-for-ransom and could complicate international military efforts against the piracy trade.

Now, I'm not exactly an expert on the art of piracy but it seems to me that this might just mess up all piracy schemes in the future - who will pay a ransom after this stunt? Without a guarantee that the hostages will be freed, who would pay it?

If I'm the Indians...well, if they aren't willing to release their Somali pirate prisoners, then I'd be laying out a plan to destroy the Somali coastline where these guys will be landing with the hostages. Sure, it wouldn't bode well for the hostages but they are more than likely dead any way in just a matter of days...and the Indians might get lucky and happen upon the hostages in an operation.

Somalia has to realize that the pirates have opened that country up for invasion by a multitude of countries who are feeling the sting of the piracy. I say you work an attack on Somalia that makes it impossible for pirates to even launch a boat.



Somali pirates keep Indian hostages after ransom


MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) - In a move that could change the pirate-hostage equation, Somali pirates on Friday took in a multimillion dollar ransom, then released the ship and some of the crew but kept all the Indian crew members as hostages.

A pirate told The Associated Press the Indian crew members' hostage ordeal is being prolonged in retaliation for the arrests of more than 100 Somali pirates by the Indian Navy.

"We decided to keep the Indian because India is holding our colleagues," the pirate, Hassan Farah, said. "We released the other crew members who sailed away from our coast. We will keep these Indians until the Indians release our colleagues."

Farah said the pirates in the stronghold of Haradhere have taken that collective decision. The Indian hostages are to be moved to land.

A multimillion dollar ransom was paid for the ship Asphalt Venture, whose ownership is located in Mumbai, India. Pirates are receiving an average of $5 million to release ships and crew, and a ransom in that ballpark was believed to have been paid on Friday.

It wasn't immediately clear how many of the 15 crew members aboard the Asphalt Venture were Indian. The ship was hijacked in late September.

Friday's pirate action marks a major departure from the standard pirate business model of release-for-ransom and could complicate international military efforts against the piracy trade.

Earlier this year pirates killed four American hostages while U.S. Navy warships were shadowing the hijacked yacht, the first time pirates had done that.

Overall, analysts say pirates are becoming increasingly aggressive, violent and hostile.

The Indian navy has seized around 120 pirates, mostly from Somalia, over the past few months. Last month the Indian navy captured 61 pirates when they attacked a naval ship. Indian warships have been escorting merchant ships as part of international anti-piracy surveillance in the Indian Ocean area since 2008.

Piracy has long plagued the shipping industry off East Africa, but violence has escalated in recent months. Pirates held some 30 ships and more than 600 hostages.

3 comments:

Rose said...

I kinda have a feeling that Muslim/Islam has gotten to the point that the entire world is going to have to come down on them hard, and they will.

The world cannot go on being tolerant of murderous devotees of a certain religion. There will be a vast overreaction, and it will be sad, but it will be their own fault.

Anonymous said...

>>The world cannot go on being tolerant of murderous devotees of a certain religion.

It pains me to say it, Rose, but liberals will tolerate Islam up until the moment the scimitar is at their own throat. They are detached from reality.

An "overreaction" is exactly what is needed. The last time it was called The Crusades, and was fairly effective for a thousand years.

Holger Awakens said...

Rose and Anonymous,

GREAT comments by both of you - I agree that the Libs will be the first to see their heads roll but agree with Rose that at some time, some of us will gather at the new Gates of Vienna.

:Holger Danske