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Indian Navy ship fights Somali pirates, sinks ship

TimePublished on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:11, Updated on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 19:47 in World section

SINKING IN: The incident occured off the Gulf of Aden earlier this week. (Representative pic)

SINKING IN: The incident occured off the Gulf of Aden earlier this week. (Representative pic)


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New Delhi: Indian Navy stealth frigate INS Tabar has successfully repulsed an attack by pirates off the Somali coast and sunk their ship, an official said on Wednesday.

The Indian Navy ship was fired at by pirates in the Gulf of Aden late on Tuesday.

“The pirates fired at INS Tabar, which is patrolling the waters off the Somali coast. The ship retaliated and sank the pirate vessel,” a navy official said.

Last week, INS Tabar had staved off an attack by Somali pirates on two merchant vessels - one from India and another from Saudi Arabia.

Somali pirates seize Greek carrier

Meanwhile, Somali pirates have seized another ship, a Greek bulk carrier, despite a large international naval presence in the waters off their lawless country, a regional maritime group said today.

The East African Seafarers' Assistance Programme said the Greek vessel was taken yesterday in the Gulf of Aden, the second ship seized since the weekend's spectacular capture of a Saudi supertanker that was the largest hijack in history.

'The pirates are sending out a message to the world that 'we can do what we want, we can think the unthinkable, do the unexpected',' Andrew Mwangura, coordinator of the Mombasa-based group, said in the Kenyan port of Mombasa.

His organisation has been monitoring this year's explosion in piracy off Somalia, fuelled by an Islamist insurgency onshore and motivated by the lure of multi-million-dollar ransoms.

No ransom has been demanded so far for the Saudi-owned supertanker Sirius Star, a ship three times the size of an aircraft carrier and loaded with oil worth 100 million dollars.

In their boldest and furthest strike yet, pirates dodged international naval patrols to seize it 450 nautical miles southeast of Mombasa on Saturday, far beyond their usual zone of operations.

They brought it back to Somalia, where it was believed to be anchored near the port of Haradheere. Mwangura said the Greek ship had between 23 and 25 crew members but he had no further details.

It followed the hijacking, also in the Gulf of Aden, of a Hong Kong-flagged ship carrying grain and bound for Iran. Rampant piracy in the region has driven up insurance costs, made some shipping companies take a route round South Africa instead of through the Suez Canal, and prompted an unprecedented response from NATO and the European Union among others.

Somali pirates are holding about a dozen ships and more than 200 hostages, most near Eyl village on the northern coast.

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