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Monday, December 1, 2008

Somali pirates to free Yemen cargo ship

Nobody has a good Idea of how to stop the Pirates from hijacking any more ships ! so they keep negotiating their way out of these situations ! the Pirates are being pressured to release the Yemini ship because it is one from their own area !!!
A nice naval blockade along with a lot of Ammo , and the will to just eliminate these meatbags from the earth is all it will take ! fuck going on land , that is a lost cause ! Don't let them ever leave the land again , that should reduce the threat to a insignificant level!!!


BOSASSO, Somalia (Reuters) - Somali pirates have agreed to release a Yemeni cargo ship, the MV Amani, without ransom, after negotiations between the hijackers, local elders and provincial officials, a minister said on Friday.

"No ransom was paid, but after negotiations, the pirates will get off the ship soon. The Yemeni ship will be released in the coming hours," Ali Abdi Aware, state minister of the northern province of Puntland, told Reuters.

The ship was seized on November 25 in the Gulf of Aden. No other details about the vessel, its crew and cargo were available.

Aware said the Yemeni ambassador to Somalia was also in Puntland to participate in the negotiations to release the ship.

A surge in piracy in the Gulf of Aden has sent foreign warships rushing to the area, but the attacks continue despite the huge presence of international forces.

In a separate development, a Kenyan maritime official said on Sunday that gunmen who captured a Ukrainian ship carrying 33 tanks and other military hardware had reached a deal with its owners to release the vessel.

The pirates and owners of the MV Faina were discussing arrangements for delivering the money, said Andrew Mwangura of the East African Seafarers' Assistance Programme.

The pirates had previously demanded a $20 million ransom.

Somali pirates have taken advantage of chaos on the Somali mainland to launch attacks offshore in a major global sea artery used by about 20,000 vessels a year. The gangs normally seek and often received large ransoms, and it is rare for pirates to release vessels without some monetary incentive.

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