Nairobi - The US Navy is monitoring the path of a hijacked
Saudi oil tanker as it makes its way to anchorage off the coast of
Somalia but does not plan any action to recover the ship, a US navy
official said Tuesday.
The tanker Sirius Star, which was sailing under a Liberian flag,
was seized by Somali pirates on Saturday 450 nautical miles
south-east of the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa.
'If it follows the pattern seen in previous attacks, we expect it
to be taken to anchorage somewhere off the coast of Somali,'
Commander Jane Campbell, a Bahrain-based spokeswoman for the US
Navy's 5th fleet, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.
'We are not specifically tracking the vessel with any warship at
this time, but will maintain situational awareness,' she added.
Somali pirates often take their ships to anchorage near the pirate
stronghold of Eyl, in the semi-autonomous northern region of
Puntland, where they keep international warships at bay by holding
crew members hostage.
Ship owner Vela International, a subsidiary of Saudi Arabian oil
company Saudi Aramco, said in a statement on its website that the
ship was carrying a full load of crude oil when it was seized.
The Sirius Star, which is 330 metres long, can carry up to 2
million barrels of oil, meaning its cargo is worth in the vicinity of
100 million dollars.
However, the pirates, who operate out of small launches from a
mothership, do not have the capability to unload the crude and are
expected to hold the ship to ransom.
The ship's 25 crew members, who are from Britain, Croatia, the
Philippines, Poland and Saudi Arabia, are all safe, Vela
International said in a statement.
No contact has yet been made with the pirates, but Vela said it
had set up response teams to negotiate the safe release of the crew
members and the tanker.
Campbell said that the 5th fleet, which patrols a shipping
corridor in the pirate-ridden Gulf of Aden, was not planning to
intervene in the hijacking.
'Once she reaches an anchorage point, they will begin
negotiations ... it is now a hostage situation,' she said. 'We don't
see this as a military mission but as a criminal act at sea. The
lives of crew members could be threatened.'
The ship is the largest taken by pirates in a series of hijackings
in the area over the past months and represents their most daring
raid yet.
The attack took place well outside the normal danger areas in the
Gulf of Aden and off the coast of Somalia.
The Gulf of Aden is a busy shipping channel which forms part of
the route linking the Indian Ocean with the Mediterranean Sea through
the Suez canal.
The International Maritime Bureau says that 63 attempted attacks
of piracy took place off the coast of Somalia in the first nine
months of this year.
Since these figures were released in October, there have been
several dozen new attacks.
At least 12 ships with about 250 crew members continue to be
held by pirates. Those include a Ukrainian freighter, the MV Faina,
that was captured while carrying 33 tanks to Mombasa.
Over 30 ships have been successfully seized so far this year.
The surge in piracy has prompted increased patrols by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, Russia, the US-led coalition forces and
France along the Somali coast.
The European Union has also authorized a force of five to seven
frigates, which is expected to arrive in the Gulf of Aden early
December.
However, the pirates appear undaunted by the increased naval
presence and continue to attack ships in search of
multimillion-dollar ransoms.
A report released by London-based independent think tank Chatham
House in October said that pirates had scooped up to 30 million
dollars from ransoms in 2008.
Chatham House also warned in October that shipping companies were
likely to begin abandoning the Gulf of Aden, increasing delivery
times and the price of commodities and oil.
Its prediction now seems to be coming true.
Norwegian shipping company Odfjell SE on Monday said it would
begin to reroute its ships away around the Cape of Good Hope to avoid
attacks.
Insurance premiums for ships sailing through the Gulf of Aden have
increased tenfold this year due to the attacks, Chatham House said.
The US Navy has said, however, that many of the attacks could be
avoided and that shipping companies were not taking simple security
measures.
'One of the things we have tried to do with recent spike in
activity is to ensure that mariners and shipping lines understand the
proactive measures they need to take in order to protect their ships,
crew and cargo,' Campbell said.
The surge in piracy off Somalia has coincided with a rise in
violence in Somalia itself, where authorities in the central and
southern region are battling a bloody insurgency.
The weak central government has been unable to suppress either the
insurgency or the growing piracy.
Somalia has been engulfed in chaos and civil war since the fall of
dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.
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