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NATO warships foil pirate attack

Canadian PM praises crew for foiling Somali pirate attack
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Sunday praised the crew of a Canadian warship that helped chase down pirates off Somalia who had tried to attack a Norwegian tanker. Speaking at the end of a Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago, Harper congratulated the personnel on the HMCS Winnipeg that, along with a British vessel also conducting NATO patrols of the pirate-infested zone, foiled the attack. The Winnipeg crew was doing "tremendous work" in the Gulf of Aden he told reporters. Their frigate pursued the pirate ship for seven hours after the British vessel scared it away from the 80,000-ton tanker on Saturday. The pirates were finally caught early Sunday after throwing their weapons overboard, NATO officials said. After being questioned, they were released because they were outside Canada's jurisdiction and NATO has no mandate to make arrests. "We obviously act within our legal authority and also within our capacities," Harper said. "As you know we did briefly detain pirates and disarm them and I think those were appropriate measures under the circumstances. Obviously Canada uses force but only when necessary."
by Staff Writers
Nairobi (AFP) April 19, 2009
NATO warships foiled a pirate attack on a Norwegian tanker, catching up with the would-be hijackers on Sunday after a seven-hour pursuit.

The dramatic overnight chase in the Gulf of Aden came after seven pirates on a skiff tried to board the 80,000-tonne MV Front Ardennes but fled when foreign ships approached.

First on the scene was a British Royal Fleet Auxiliary vessel, the Wave Knight, but it was a Canadian frigate, the Winnipeg, which then gave chase.

"The pirates who initially had weapons and what appeared to be climbing gear threw all of that overboard," said NATO maritime spokesman Commander Chris Davies.

"When the Winnipeg finally caught up and stopped them... I am told there was sufficient evidence that these were pirates."

The suspects were held and questioned but could not be charged with any offence because doing so was not within Canada's jurisdiction.

A Belgian ship, the 65-metre (213-foot) Pompei, was not so lucky, falling into pirate hands about 150 kilometres (93 miles) north of the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean.

A reconnaissance flight Saturday by a Spanish naval helicopter revealed the Pompei was towing a much smaller vessel -- thought to be a pirate boat -- and was turned towards the Somali coast, some 700 kilometres away.

The captain of the 1,850-tonne vessel is Dutch, and the rest of the crew comprises two Belgians, three Filipinos and four Croatians. It was the first Belgian ship to be seized by Somali pirates.

Dutch marines, meanwhile, thwarted a pirate attack on a Greek-owned tanker in the Gulf of Aden on Saturday, freeing 16 Yemeni fishermen in the process.

A Dutch defence ministry spokesman said the attack had been launched from a dhow, a traditional Arab sail boat, captured last Thursday.

The pirates fled back to the dhow but a British naval vessel in the vicinity intervened and kept its guns trained on the group until Dutch commandos arrived under NATO orders to board.

"The marines found 25 people on board, nine of them suspected pirates," spokesman Robin Middel told AFP. The remaining 16 were the Yemeni fishermen.

They also found seven AK47 assault rifles and a rocket launcher, which were seized and destroyed. The suspects were later released on the instructions of a NATO squadron commander.

"There exists no legal framework in the NATO for arrests to be carried out," Middel explained.

The Law of the Sea Convention gives foreign warships the right to prevent, deter and respond to acts of piracy but it does not apply to territorial waters and inadequately addresses the issue of transfer ashore.

While scores of suspected pirates have been captured by foreign warships since piracy surged in the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden in late 2007, few have been taken into foreign custody. Most have been handed over to the authorities of the breakaway Somali state of Puntland, a major piracy hub.

In an operation last weekend to free the captain of a US ship held hostage on a lifeboat, American naval forces shot dead three pirates and captured the fourth, who is to face charges in a New York court.

Puntland's president, Abdurahman Mohamed Farole, on a visit to Nairobi this weekend appealed for international assistance to set up a special anti-piracy task force of some 2,400 men to patrol the coast and rein in attacks.

Somali pirates attacked more than 130 merchant ships in the Gulf of Aden last year, an increase of more than 200 percent on 2007, according to the International Maritime Bureau which tracks piracy.

Philippines President Gloria Arroyo issued directives to try and ban Filipino seamen from serving on ships in the pirate-infested sea lanes off Somalia, although officials conceded it was not clear how to enforce the ban.

Some 105 Philippine nationals are still in the hands of Somali pirates.

burs-boc/ag

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French navy planners offer anti-pirate ship
Paris (AFP) April 17, 2009
As navies and shipowners try to combat an upsurge in deadly pirate attacks off the Somali coast, a French company is offering a new vessel specially designed to tame the scourge.







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