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Somali pirates hijack Greek ship
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Armed Somali men have hijacked a Greek-owned ship, with 24 crew members on board, a maritime security centre says. The ship belongs to All Oceans Shipping of Greece and is managed by the London based Seven Seas Maritime.

Describing Saturday's incident, Andrew Mwangura of the East African Seafarers' Assistance Programme told the Reuters news agency: "MT Ariana was seized at 02:00 GMT, north of Madagascar, en route to the Middle East from Brazil. The Ukrainian crew are said to be unhurt."

Earlier in the day, Nato said that Somali pirates hijacked a UK-owned ship about 463km southwest of the Seychelles islands in the Indian Ocean.

The crew members were believed to be unharmed in the attack, which occurred at dawn. (Aljazeera)

According to BBC, the Portuguese warship, the Corte Real, sent a helicopter to help the oil tanker Kition after a distress call was made.

The incident happened about 100 miles (160km) from the Somali coast.

The Portuguese helicopter chased the pirates back to their "mother ship", or command vessel, and briefly detained about 19 pirates, a Nato spokesman said.

Explosives and grenade launchers were discovered on the mother ship when Portuguese special forces boarded "with no exchange of fire", Lt Cmdr Alexandre Santos Fernandes said.

"It was almost a kilogramme of high explosives. If used correctly it can open a hole in the hull of a ship and sink her," Lt Cmdr Fernandes said.

"It is the first time we have spotted high explosives on board a pirate ship, normally they just stick to AK-47s and RPGs (grenades)."

The 19 pirate suspects were released because they had not attacked Portuguese property or citizens.

In total, pirates are now holding 18 ships and some 300 crew.

The pirates were disarmed and then released, as Nato patrols have no authority to make arrests.

Global Arab Network
 

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