MOGADISHU, Somalia - A band of Somali pirates split a $4 million ransom to release a Chinese cargo ship and 25 sailors after two months in captivity, one of the hijackers said Monday. The EU Naval Force said the bulk carrier De Xin Hai was released outside of Hobyo, Somalia, on Sunday. The crew and ship are in good condition, the force said. China's official Xinhua News Agency said the ship and crew were now under the protection of a Chinese naval fleet after an early morning rescue. It did not give further details about the rescue. The De Xin Hai was the first Chinese vessel to be hijacked since China deployed a three-ship squadron to the Gulf of Aden last year, joining Britain, India, Iran, the U.S., France and other countries in anti-piracy patrols. ... Pirate attacks in the area nearly doubled in 2009 over a year earlier, despite the deployment in December 2008 of the European Union Naval Force - the first international force specifically to counter Somali pirates. A Somali man who said he was a pirate told The Associated Press that pirates were paid $4 million to release the ship and crew. "We have been given the ransom money, checked it, counted it and shared it among ourselves," said the self-proclaimed pirate, who gave his name as Ahmed Afweyne. Somali pirates have been paid more than $100 million in ransom over the last two years. After the release of the Chinese vessel, Somali pirates hold eight vessels and 213 crew, the EU Naval Force said. |
Stop paying these bastards. Start killing more of them. What other industry in that part of the world pays $400,000,000 in a couple years and as far as I can tell just doesn't kill that many people.
It is going to take two stacks of corpses to stop this. One stack of dead crewmen and one huge stack of pyrites.
No comments:
Post a Comment