News / Africa

Somali Pirates Free Indian Crew of 21

TEXT SIZE - +

Indian shipping officials say all 21 Indian crew members of a chemical oil tanker held hostage by Somali pirates since August have been released.

An Indian shipping spokesman said late Saturday the crew and the ship, the MV Fairchem Bogey, are heading towards a safe port.  He did not give any details of the release, including whether a ransom was paid.

The Marshall Islands-flagged vessel was hijacked August 20 when it was anchored at Salalah port in Oman.

The shipping official said Saturday 22 Indian sailors remain held by Somali pirates on various ships in the Indian Ocean.

Piracy for ransom is an organized and lucrative operation in Somalia that has expanded into a vast area off the country's coast.

International naval forces are patrolling the waters near Somalia.  Shipping companies have increasingly taken security measures to prevent hijackings, such as posting armed guards on board, and building "safe rooms" in which crews can lock themselves if pirates board their ships.

Some information for this report was provided by AFP.

You May Like

Video Egypt's Conservative Rural Vote Appears Split

Early speculation after the first two-day round is showing a race too close to call More

NATO Continues Plans for Missile Defense

While Afghanistan dominated talks in Chicago, member states also reaffirmed their commitment to ballistic-missile defense More

War Declared on Invasive Leaping Asian Carp

When Asian carp were first imported decades ago, few foresaw their environmental impact. More

This forum has been closed.
Comments
     
There are no comments in this forum. Be first and add one

Latest Africa News

VOA Reporter Detained in Ethiopia

More

VOA Reporter Detained in Ethiopia

More

US Condemns Mali Violence

More

UN Calls for Suspension of Sanctions on Zimbabwe

More

Rights Group Says Cluster Bomb Found in Sudan Conflict Zone

More
Read more