A British man held hostage by Somali pirates has said his captors have threatened to kill him or his wife “within four or five days” if they do not receive a ransom. Paul and Rachel Chandler disappeared while sailing from the Seychelles to Tanzania on October 23 near waters teeming with Somali pirates, who regularly seize ships for ransom.
Their yacht, the Lynn Rival, was later found abandoned, and Somali pirates confirmed they were holding the couple hostage. Speaking in a telephone interview with British TV channel ITN broadcast Thursday, Paul Chandler, 59, said he has been separated from his wife Rachel, 55, and that he believed time was running short. “I’m afraid that they will just kill us and abandon us in the desert here,” he said. There were rumours of a deal that would have freed the couple for as little as $100,000 at the tail end of 2009, but the British government allegedly blocked the move.
A spokeswoman for the Foreign Office told DPA on Friday that their policy was to not “make or facilitate concessions to hostage-takers”. The British government is, however, monitoring the situation and doing everything it can to secure the Chandlers’ release, the spokeswoman added. Pirates often say they will execute hostages in what is generally an empty threat. They rarely harm captives and fatalities usually occur during the initial pirate attempt to board the ship or rescue attempts by foreign naval forces. Piracy is rife off the Horn of Africa nation, which has not had a functioning central government since 1991.
Young men take to the seas in search of multimillion-dollar ransoms despite the presence of over a dozen international warships, which were dispatched to the Gulf of Aden in 2008 to combat a rise in piracy. The pirates have expanded their operations further out into the Indian Ocean to avoid the patrols and the International Maritime Bureau said last week that Somalis were largely responsible for a global increase in pirate attacks in 2009.
There were 406 attacks in 2009, compared to 293 the previous year, and over half of them were off the coast of Somalia, the IMB said. Somali pirates were believed to have scooped their biggest payday so far on Monday, when a Greek supertanker carrying millions of barrels of crude oil from Saudi Arabia to the United States was released. The ransom airdropped onto the ship was believed to be between 5.5 and 7 million dollars.
Source: The Hindu
Showing posts with label Lynn Rival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lynn Rival. Show all posts
Friday, January 22, 2010
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Pirates 'seize UK yacht couple'
A Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) spokeswoman said it could not confirm whether pirates were involved. We are in touch with the family in the UK and the Seychelles coastguards which continues to monitor the situation and has conducted a search of the area," she added.A spokesman for the Seychelles Coast Guard said they had not heard from the couple, who were out of reach by satellite phone. He said: "There have been reports that they were hijacked by pirates but no one can prove that. We don't know what has happened and cannot speculate." The couple's niece Leah Mickleborough said she last saw the couple at her wedding in September. She told BBC Radio 5 live they were experienced sailors who had lived on their yacht for several years. She said the family were told on Friday that the distress signal had been set off but switched off again, as if it was an accident. They were expecting the couple to come into a dock on an island where they could make contact, but were warned by the FCO on Monday that there would be reports of a kidnapping in the media. "We were fairly confident that maybe it was just an accident," she said. "All of us in the family are extremely upset by what's happened and we're very distressed. "We all hope they are OK and this can be resolved easily." Britain's Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said the couple's distress beacon was activated at 2300 BST on Friday.
They were on a 150 nautical-mile passage south-west to the Amirante Islands, en route to Tanzania when they used the Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon. The route would have taken the couple near Somali waters which are notorious for pirate attacks on ships and smaller boats. It is understood that there had been pirate activity in the area earlier in the day. Earlier this year Seychellois officials requested help from the international community to defend their waters.
The Chandlers previously wrote of "the Somali pirate problem" that delayed other voyages to Tanzania. In a post on their blog in June, the couple wrote: "The seas around the Seychelles are now too rough for the pirates to operate in."
Nick Davis, Merchant Maritime Warfare Centre, said the waters around the Seychelles had become one of the most dangerous areas in the world for piracy since warships had moved into the Gulf of Aden to protect merchant ships. In the past few weeks pirates have taken a fishing boat, container ship and cargo dry bulk carrier.
Source: BBC
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