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Somali pirates demand ransom for Chinese vessel, after first being paid to protect it.

Sunday 8,Dec, 2024 {HMC}Ā  The 18 crew were taken hostage by the same men who were contracted to provide the ship with protection, with other pirates as reinforcement

Somali pirates who hijacked a Chinese fishing boat have demanded a ransom payment for the vessel and its 18 crew members, police and local officials said on Saturday.

It was not immediately clear when the ship was taken hostage by gunmen wielding AK-47 assault rifles but the European Unionā€™s anti-piracy force drew global attention to the incident on Thursday.

ā€œThe pirates are moving the ship off the coast ā€¦ they are looking for a safe haven,ā€ said Mohamed Dini, a police officer in Eyl, a traditional pirate stronghold on Puntlandā€™s east coast.

The boat was hijacked by men who had been contracted to provide ā€œprotectionā€ before later being reinforced by other pirates, Dini said, adding that they had demanded payment for its release.

Ali Warsame, a local elder familiar with the case, said a Somali company acting on the boatā€™s behalf had offered to pay a US$300,000 ransom. But the proposal was declined by the pirates.

Local fishermen said the boat came close to Eyl on Friday, but the pirates pushed back into the sea out of fear of Puntlandā€™s coastguards. But ā€œthey cannot move deeper towards the ocean because they are afraid of the foreign military shipsā€, said fisherman Abdirahman Said.

EUā€™s anti-piracy naval force Atalanta on Friday said it was closely monitoring the event ā€œclassified as armed robbery at seaā€. ā€œThe crew remains safe, with no injuries,ā€ it added.

The incident is the latest episode in a surge of Somali pirate activity after years of lull.

In March, Somali pirates hijacked a Bangladeshi cargo ship transporting more than 55,000 tonnes (60,600 tons) of coal from Mozambique to the United Arab Emirates.

The bulk carrier MV Abdullah was freed after its Bangladeshi owners, KSRM Group, paid a hefty ransom that was airdropped over the vessel in sackloads of US dollars. The ransom amount was not disclosed by the company.

A series of incidents since then has fuelled concerns about a resurgence of Indian Ocean raids by opportunistic pirates exploiting a security gap after the redeployment of international forces.

Source Hiiraan online

WARARKA