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Pirates of Somalia Pirates Tanks

26 September 2008 2,184 views One Comment

Russia’s navy ordered a warship to Somalia’s coast, officials said Friday, after pirates seized a Ukrainian vessel loaded with 33 tanks, ammunition, and Russian and Ukrainian crew members.

Russian navy spokesman Capt. Igor Dygalo said in a statement that the frigate Neustrashimy left the Russia’s Baltic port of Baltiisk on Wednesday. The statement did not specifically mention the seizure on Thursday of the Ukrainian ship.

Ukrainian Defense Minister Yury Yekhanurov said that the ship, the Faina, was carrying 33 Russian T-72 tanks and a substantial quantity of ammunition and spare parts. Yekhanurov said the tanks were sold in accordance with international law, according to Larisa Mudrak, a spokeswoman for Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko.

A Kenyan government spokesman, Alfred Mutua, confirmed that the East African nation’s military had ordered the tanks and spare parts and said Kenya had made such a huge order of tanks as part of a two-year rearmament program for the military.

“The government is in contact with international maritime agencies and other security partners in an endeavor to secure the ship and cargo,” Mutua said in a statement. “The government is actively monitoring the situation.”

A person who answered the phone at Ukrainian state-controlled arms dealer Ukrspetsexport, which brokered the sale, refused to comment about the Ukrainian vessel, and said all requests for information must be submitted in writing.

Ukrainian officials and an anti-piracy watchdog said 21 crew members were aboard the seized ship, and Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry said the crew included three Russians.

U.S. ships are in the area and are “monitoring the situation,” Lt. Nate Christensen, spokesman for the U,S, Navy’s 5th Fleet said, but added he could not go further into specifics because of the security issues involved.

“Obviously, we are deeply concerned,” Christensen said. “We have ships inthe area and we are monitoring the situation closely. Piracy is an international problem and it requires an international solution.”

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman noted that the military has assisted foreign countries in previous instances of piracy.

“I think we’re looking at the full range of options here,” said Whitman. “A ship carrying cargo of that nature being hijacked off the coast of Somalia is something that should concern us, and it does concern us. And we are monitoring the situation and taking a look at what the options might be.”

Mikhail Voitenko, editor-in-chief of the journal “Naval Bulletin-Sovfrakht,” said in televised comments that the ship sailed under a Belize flag and the operator is a Ukrainian company based in the Black Sea port of Odessa. Ukrainian news agencies identified the ship operator as a company called Tomex Team.

Roger Middleton, a researcher at London-based international affairs research firm Chatham House said it was unlikely the pirates knew there were tanks aboard the Faina, and he said unloading the cargo would be very difficult.

“Most of their attacks are based on opportunity. So if they see something that looks attackable and looks captureable, they’ll attack it,” he said.

“I’m not sure how helpful such a high-profile cargo will be for them. It makes them much more vulnerable,” he said. “I’d imagine they’re quite worried.”

Dygalo said Russia’s navy would periodically send ships to piracy-prone areas to protect Russian citizens and Russian ships. He said the frigate set sail on Wednesday “with the aim of providing for a naval presence in a number of oceans and sea regions.”

According to the British-based Jane’s Information Group, the Neustrashimy is armed with surface-to-air missiles, 100 mm guns and anti-submarine torpedoes.

Yushchenko, meanwhile, ordered unspecified measures to secure the release of the crew.

This is the 61st attack off Somalia this year, and pirates are now holding 14 ships and more than 300 crew members, said Noel Choong, who heads the International Maritime Bureau’s piracy reporting center based in Malaysia.

Middleton said it was unclear how the pirates might react if confronted by military action, noting that they have fled from authorities in the past. On the other hand, he said, they are usually well-armed and organized and are based in an unstable country — Somalia.

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One Comment »

  • Hat Shrapnel » Coolest End-World Scenario Possible said:

    [...] not know that last Thursday three ships full of pirates (buckling their swashes, one would assume) hijacked a Ukrainian ship carrying 33 T-72 Soviet tanks and small arms off the coast of Somalia. I will wait while the full impact of that sinks in for [...]

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