Tampilkan postingan dengan label Pirate Attacks. Tampilkan semua postingan
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Sabtu, 21 Mei 2011

Piracy: IMO (UN) endorses use of armed guards on ships

BBC News, 21 May 2011

PIRACY CRISIS

The UN's International Maritime Organization (IMO) has endorsed the use of private armed guards to protect ships from piracy.

Anti-piracy patrols off the coast of Somalia
have had limited success
After a meeting in London, the IMO issued guidelines for the use of guards on board ships in areas of high risk, including in the Indian Ocean.

About one in 10 ships off the Somali coast already carry armed guards.

But observers say this number is likely to rise now that the UN has endorsed the practice.

The IMO says there were 489 reports of piracy and armed robbery against ships in 2010 - up more then 20% on 2009.

The areas worst affected were the Indian Ocean, East Africa and the Far East including the South China Sea, South America and the Caribbean.

So far this year more than 200 cases have been reported.

Correspondents say piracy in the Indian Ocean is getting more lucrative and more violent, despite an anti-piracy EU naval force patrolling the area.

Torture

The IMO's new recommendations are backed by the independent trade body for security companies operating at sea, the Security Association for the Maritime Industry (Sami), launched last year.

Peter Cook, co-founder of Sami, told the BBC: "The pirates have been killing - they have been torturing and doing fake executions and the level of violence is increasing.

"It is clear that something has got to be done in order for free trade to be able to continue and it is for that reason that the IMO have decided to go down this very unusual route."

The IMO insists that the guidelines are not intended to institutionalise the use of armed, privately contracted security staff on ships and that they do not address all the legal issues that could be linked to their use.

The IMO describes the guidance as "interim recommendations" and says it will review them in September.

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Minggu, 01 Mei 2011

Palm oil tanker, 25 crew believed seized off Kenya

The Jakarta Post, The Associated Press, Singapore, Sun, 05/01/2011

A Singapore shipper says pirates have likely hijacked a palm oil tanker and its 25-member crew off the coast of Kenya.

Glory Ship Management Pte. Ltd. said in a statement Sunday that pirates are believed to have seized the Singapore-registered MT Gemini and its more than 28,000 tons of crude palm oil.

Glory said the ship was en route to Mombasa, Kenya, from Indonesia when it was believed to be hijacked and is now likely headed to Somalia.

The shipper said it is making every effort to secure the release of the crew, consisting of 13 Indonesians, five Chinese, four South Koreans and three Myanmar citizens.

Somali Pirates Free Indonesian Cargo Ship

Jakarta Globe, Mohamed Ahmed, May 01, 2011

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Mogadishu. Somali pirates have freed an Indonesian bulk carrier after the ship's owner paid a ransom, pirates and a maritime source said on Saturday.

MV Sinar Kudus cargo ship was carrying nickels from
Indonesia to Amsterdam, the Netherlands, when it was
captured by Somalian pirates last month.
(Photo Source Metro TV)
The Sinar Kindus was captured by pirates on March 16 approximately 320 miles north of east Socotra in the Somali basin, with its crew of 20.

Pirates said they released the ship after a ransom payment was airdropped to them.
"We received the cash of $4.5 million early this morning. We have abandoned the ship and it is preparing to sail away," a pirate who gave his name as Geney told Reuters from El-Dhanane coastal village.

Andrew Mwangura, a Kenya-based former maritime official and now the maritime editor of The Somalia Report confirmed the ship had been freed, adding it had not started to sail away yet.

Pirate gangs are making tens of millions of dollars in ransoms as international navies patrolling the Gulf Of Aden struggle to contain piracy in the Indian Ocean due to the vast distances involved.

Reuters
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Minggu, 10 April 2011

Kidnapped Indonesian Sailors Plea for Government's Help

Jakarta Globe, Ismira Lutfia | April 10, 2011

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The captain of MV Sinar Kudus has pleaded to the Indonesian government to help him and his 20 Indonesian crew, who have been held hostage by Somali pirates for three weeks.

Captain Slamet from MV Sinar Kudus cargo ship.
Slamet and his 20 crews are still being held hostage
by Somali pirates. (Photo Source Metro TV)
In a telephone conversation with Metro TV on Sunday, Capt. Slamet Jauhari said he was in good health, but twelve of his crews were ill.

“There is no clean water, we are only fed once a day, and twelve of my crew are mentally crushed. To the Indonesian government, please rescue us,” Slamet said.

The 21 men were taken hostage on March 16 after Somali pirates ambushed their vessel, carrying 8,300 tons of nickel produced by PT Aneka Tamabang, in the Gulf of Aden, Somalia, en route to Amsterdam.

Slamet said the pirates were demanding $2.5 million in ransom and that they had threaten to raise the amount unless they received confirmation from the ship's owner or the Indonesian government that the money would be paid.

“I am asking the Indonesian government, Bapak SBY [President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono] or any businessman who has the money, please save my crew,” Slamet said.

Foreign Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa said on Saturday that efforts were underway to secure the release of the Indonesian hostages.

"The Indonesian government is deeply concerned with this situation and we are investigating options to settle this problem as soon as possible," Marty said on the sidelines of a meeting between Japan and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).

He said that the ship’s owner had been in constant communications with the pirates.

Marty declined to comment further on the efforts as he did not want to jeopardize the hostage's lives.

"For the moment we are working on their release and efforts to protect them are ongoing," he said.


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Rabu, 23 Maret 2011

Dutch MPs agree to troops on merchant ships

RNW, 23 March 2011

The Dutch parliament has agreed to deploy Dutch troops on board a number of Dutch merchant ships to protect them against piracy in the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden. The only party to vote against the measure was the Socialist Party, which said too many things about the mission were unclear.

The first Dutch sailors will embark in the Indian city of Mumbai on Wednesday. Thirty sailors will join two tow boats sailing under the Dutch flag and a crane ship sailing under the Panamanian flag. The convoy will sail to the United Arab Emirates. Later this month 20 other sailors will sail with a Dutch ship sailing from China to the Netherlands - the troops will join the ship for 22 days at Singapore and disembark in the Republic Djibouti on the Horn of Africa.

The operation will cost 1 million euros altogether and the costs will be shared between the Ministry of Defence and the shipping companies. Most of the costs will be for the ministry as it covers the costs of transporting troop and military hardware. The cabinet has promised to take another look at how the costs are divided as MPs are reluctant to approve such high spending.

Defence Minister Hans Hillen expects this kind of operation to be an exception rather than the rule. The minister declined to say what material will be on board to prevent attacks by pirates. This is the first time military personnel will be on board merchant ships to protect them for piracy.


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Kamis, 17 Maret 2011

Up to 50 Somali Pirates Seize Indonesian Ship: EU

Jakarta Globe, March 17, 2011

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An unusually large group of 30 to 50 Somali pirates seized an Indonesian vessel and used it in a failed bid to hijack a second ship on Thursday, the EU naval mission said.

The pirates hijacked the bulk carrier Sinar Kudus about 320 nautical miles northeast of the island of Socotra on Wednesday morning, the EU anti-piracy mission said. It has 20 Indonesian sailors on board.

“Details of the attack are not known at this time but initial reports from the crew stated that 30 to 50 pirates had boarded and taken control of the vessel,” the EU Navfor force said in a statement.

The Indonesian flagged and owned ship was on its way to Suez, Egypt, from Singapore when it was attacked.

The Indonesia ship was then used on Thursday to attack the Liberian-flagged bulk carrier Emperor but the pirates were repelled by an armed security crew after “an exchange of fire,” Navfor spokesman Paddy O’Kennedy told AFP.

The Emperor was reported safe.

News of the hijacking came at the same time that Tunisia’s transport ministry announced Somali pirates had released a chemical tanker hijacked in November after payment of a ransom of $2 million.

The Hannibal II, with a mostly Tunisian crew of 31, is currently on its way to Djibouti in the Red Sea, the ministry said.

Tunisia’s official TAP news agency, which quoted the ministry, did not say who paid the ransom, or how.

Agence France-Presse

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Kamis, 10 Maret 2011

Malaysia Nabs 7 Indonesians After Attack on Tanker

Jakarta Globe, March 10, 2011

Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) enforcement officers
 on Wednesday keep watch on detained Indonesian pirates in Johor,
 southern Malaysia. Authorities have arrested the seven men who
 allegedly tried to rob a tanker off southern Malaysia. (AP Photo)
  
    
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Kuala Lumpur. Malaysian authorities have arrested seven Indonesians who allegedly tried to rob a tanker off southern Malaysia.

First Adm. Zulkifli Abu Bakar of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency says the men, who were armed with weapons including an ax and a bayonet, boarded the Majuro-registered vessel anchored off Johor state before dawn on Wednesday.

But the crew, led by a Russian captain, managed to sound the alarm. Patrol boats rushed to the scene, and authorities caught the suspects and confiscated their wooden boat.

Zulkifli said on Thursday that police were investigating whether the men were involved in any of the 10 other attacks off Johor so far this year.

Authorities have stepped up patrols following the string of attacks. 

Associated Press

Rabu, 26 Januari 2011

Indonesians, two foreigners nabbed in piracy attempt

The Jakarta Post, Wed, 01/26/2011

An Indonesian Navy ship foiled an attempt by pirates to raid a spice-laden vessel on Tuesday, arresting nine pirates including a Malaysian and a Singaporean, in international waters north of Bintan Island.

The commander of Indonesian Navy Ship Kelabang 828, Maj. Bambang Wasito, said on Wednesday that the perpetrators had tried to capture private vessel MV Lucky Star, which was on its way to Songklak in Thailand on Tuesday before midnight, Tempo.interaktif reported.

The suspects, including seven Indonesians and two foreigners, were taken to a naval base in Batam for interrogation.Loaded with spices, the Indonesian flagged MV Lucky Star left Dumai on Monday with 13 crew members on board.

Bambang said the pirates, who had been on a boat with an outboard motor, had not attempted to resist when the naval ship with 40 navy officers on board approached. The  incident was the first case of piracy in Riau waters reported this year.

An Indonesian Navy ship foiled an attempt by pirates to raid a spice-laden vessel on Tuesday, arresting nine pirates including a Malaysian and a Singaporean, in international waters north of Bintan Island.

The commander of Indonesian Navy Ship Kelabang 828, Maj. Bambang Wasito, said on Wednesday that the perpetrators had tried to capture private vessel MV Lucky Star, which was on its way to Songklak in Thailand on Tuesday before midnight, Tempo.interaktif reported.

The suspects, including seven Indonesians and two foreigners, were taken to a naval base in Batam for interrogation.

Loaded with spices, the Indonesian flagged MV Lucky Star left Dumai on Monday with 13 crew members on board.

Bambang said the pirates, who had been on a boat with an outboard motor, had not attempted to resist when the naval ship with 40 navy officers on board approached. The  incident was the first case of piracy in Riau waters reported this year.

Minggu, 26 September 2010

Indonesian`s seafarers support petition to end piracy

Antara News, Sunday, September 26, 2010 13:23 WIB

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Indonesian seafarers have supported a recent petition to combat piracy launched by several international organizations.

"Every country has been urged to care for and be proactive in the fight against piracy frequently taking ship crew members hostage," Hanafi Rustandi, the president of the Indonesian Seafarers` Association (KPI), said in a press statement received by ANTARA News on Sunday.

The End Piracy Now petition, presented on UN-designated World Maritime Day, September 23, was drawn up by a coalition of 14 seafarers` unions, trade organizations, insurance companies and other relevant bodies, with support from shipowners, trade unions and welfare organizations.

The International Transport Workers` Federation (ITF) has collected around 920 signatories from 185 countries to support the petition calling for action to end Somali piracy.

"Originally intended to achieve half a million signatures, it has far exceeded that figure and definitively proves that immediate action is needed," a statement of ITF said.

KPI and other world seafarers hoped that the petition could stop piracy, a maritime crime which has often made seafarers suffer, according to Hanafi.

The International Maritime Organization (IMO) has declared the 2010 as the Year of Seafarer. There are about 1.5 million seafarers in the world.

"Starting next year, all seafarers throughout the world will celebrate the Seafarer Year annually," he said.

KPI members and seafarers whose ships are docking at Tanjung Prior harbor, celebrated the International Maritime Day modestly last Friday.

The petition was launched in June this year "as the centerpiece of a campaign to persuade all governments to commit the resources necessary to end the increasing problem of Somalia-based piracy.

Piracy has become a serious problem for tankers carrying oil, petrochemicals and dry bulk commodities around the Gulf of Aden, the east coast of Africa as well as around southeast Asia.

The London-based ITF is a global union federation with membership comprising 759 unions representing over 4,600,000 transport workers in 155 countries.

Minggu, 12 September 2010

Pirates Attack Japan Ship in Indonesian Waters

Jakarta Globe, September 12, 2010

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 Tokyo. Pirates boarded a Japanese auto transport ship and robbed its crew off Indonesia late on Friday, but no one was injured and the undamaged ship resumed its voyage, Japanese media quoted the transport ministry as saying.

The incident comes at a time over heightened concerns over ship safety after a vessel owned by Mitsui O.S.K. Lines was damaged near the Strait of Hormuz in July by a suspected explosion.

Pirates boarded the ship named Cheerleader, operated by Japan’s Nippon Yusen KK, tied up members of the crew, stole money and fled while it was sailing off the Indonesian province of Kalimantan in the island of Borneo. The 19 crew were unharmed.

This is the 10th pirate attack on ships operated or owned by a Japanese company so far this year. The tanker was heading to Jakarta from Japan’s Kobe, Sankei newspaper said.

Reuters

Selasa, 27 Juli 2010

Dutch court gives teenage sailor go-ahead

RNW, 27 July 2010 - 3:45pm


Sailor Laura Dekker (Photo: Telegraaf)


A Dutch court has ruled that teenage sailor Laura Dekker is free to go ahead with her attempt to become the youngest person to sail solo around the world.

"The court rejects the request for the extension of supervision" by the child protection authorities over 14-year-old Laura, judge Suzanne Kuypers said in the Middelburg district court in the south of the Netherlands.

"The supervision of the child is lifted with immediate effect."

The child protection services had asked the court to extend the supervision order for a further 12 months, but the court turned down the request. This means formal responsibility for Laura now returns to her parents, who both support her sailing ambitions.

To set a new record as the youngest person to complete such a round-the-world solo trip, Laura Dekker would need to complete the estimated two-year voyage before she turns 17 on 20 September 2012.

(AFP/RNW)



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Senin, 26 April 2010

Pirates Kill Thai Fisherman off Malaysia

Jakarta Globe, April 26, 2010

Kuala Lumpur. Suspected Indonesian pirates have shot dead a Thai fisherman off the northern coast of Malaysia, police said Monday.

Hatta Mohamad Zin, local police chief in Penang state, said seven pirates approached the fishing vessel and opened fire late Sunday, killing a 24-year-old fisherman.

Another Thai on the fishing boat said he suspected the pirates were from neighboring Indonesia, based on their appearance.

“All of a sudden the boat came towards us and one of them opened fire,” he was quoted as saying by the Bernama news agency.

Hatta said the pirates fled without stealing anything after seeing the fisherman lying in a pool of blood.

Agence France-Presse

Selasa, 06 April 2010

The moment armed marines abseiled onto a hijacked ship before rescuing its crew from pirates

Daily Mail, by MAIL FOREIGN SERVICE, 2:06 PM on 06th April 2010

Guns at the ready, six Navy commandos abseil from a helicopter onto the deck of a ship as they prepare to come face to face with the armed pirates hiding on board.

These pictures capture the precarious moment the Dutch marines boarded the German merchant ship, the MV Taipan, not knowing the risks that awaited them.

Minutes later they arrested the pirates and freed the ship's 15-strong crew.


Risky: Marines board the German vessel MV Taipan where 10 armed pirates were waiting on board


Hijacked: After arresting the pirates the commandos freed the crew of 15 people, who were locked away

The ten pirates had boarded the container ship - as it sat 500 miles east of Somalia - using a mothership and two attack boats.

Within hours the Dutch frigate Tromp had deployed its Lynx helicopter to the scene, after receiving a distress signal from the Taipan.

As the Tromp neared the hijacked vessel it fired warning shots and sounded alerts, sending the mothership fleeing.

After using a rope to board the ship, the marines turned off the engines and overpowered the pirates while alerting warships patrolling the Gulf of Aden.


Rescue: The Dutch helicopter was deployed after crew on the MV Taipan issued a distress alert


Brave: The marines boarded the ship, turned off engines and overpowered the pirates while alerting warships patrolling the Gulf of Aden

The German ship's crew members had locked themselves into a secure area and were unharmed. One Dutch marine was slightly injured during boarding but no one else was hurt.

The pirates were taken on board the Tromp but German Defence Ministry spokesman Robin Middel said it was not known what would be done with them. He would not reveal their nationality.

The Dutch navy launched the operation as part of an EU naval mission called Operation Atalanta which protects shipping along the key route off Somalia.

In March alone the mission captured 18 pirate gangs, destroyed 22 skiffs and apprehended 131 pirates for prosecution.

But there are still eight vessels and 157 hostages in the hands of Somali pirates.

The Taipan ship was able to continue its voyage after despite damage to its bridge, according to a statement from the Defence Ministry.

Minggu, 04 April 2010

Indonesian Sailors in Somali Pirates’ Clutches

Jakarta Globe, April 04, 2010

The nation’s Foreign Affairs Ministry confirmed on Sunday that 12 Indonesians were among those aboard a Taiwanese fishing boat that has been seized by Somali pirates.

Teguh Wardoyo, director of the Foreign Ministry’s citizens’ protection unit, told the Jakarta Globe on Sunday that “the Taiwan boat Jih Chun Tsai 68, whose crew includes 12 Indonesians, was seized on April 2.”

The deep-sea tuna trawler had a Taiwanese captain at the helm and also had two Chinese on the crew. The vessel was attacked by Somali pirates on Wednesday along with another Taiwanese fishing boat, the Jui Man Fa, which managed to escape.

In recent years, five Taiwanese fishing trawlers have been seized by Somali pirates. They were released after the ship owners paid ransoms.

Taiwan on Friday confirmed the news and said the boat was being towed toward Somalia.

“Our embassy in Nairobi has been informed and is working to find out their condition and the ship’s position," Teguh said.

“Our representative office in South Africa has contacted the missing fishing trawler, the Jih Chun Tsai 68,” Taiwan Foreign Ministry spokesman Henry Chen said. “Captain Wu Yu-lai said the boat was seized by Somali pirates and was being towed to Somalia, but the crew was safe.”

Taiwan has contacted several international and national maritime organizations to “seek help to rescue the Jih Chun Tsai,” he added.

Taiwan has warned its fishing boats and cargo ships to stay away from the Somali coast and the Gulf of Aden.

A number of Indonesian sailors have also been held by pirates in recent attacks. On Jan. 1, Somali pirates seized the MV Pramoni, a Singapore-flagged chemical tanker, with 17 Indonesian crew members aboard.

The ship was released after its owners reportedly paid an undisclosed ransom toward the end of February.

The cash was bundled in a waterproof container, attached to a parachute and pushed out the back of a small plane, a common way of delivering the multimillion-dollar ransoms demanded by the pirates.

JG, DPA

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