/ 17 October 2008

South Korean firm pays ransom to Somali pirates

A South Korean shipping company paid a ransom to Somali pirates to free its 22 sailors, an official said on Friday.

The crew members — eight South Koreans and 14 citizens of Burma — were released on Thursday along with their cargo ship Bright Ruby after more than a month of captivity following the hijacking off the coast of Somalia on September 10.

The sailors ”were released after the ransom was paid to the Somali pirates,” said the official with J&J Trust, which owns the ship. He spoke on condition of anonymity, citing the sensitivity of the issue.

He said the ransom was delivered in cash through an agency serving as a middleman. He refused to identify the agency and the amount of ransom.

A South Korean Foreign Ministry official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed the payment.

The sailors — who were all safe — were heading toward a Sri Lankan port and planned to return to South Korea later this month, the ministry said late on Thursday.

The latest incident prompted the South Korean government to consider dispatching naval vessels to waters off Somalia to counter any possible hijackings of South Korean ships.

Meanwhile, India announced it is sending naval warships to the troubled Gulf of Aden on an anti-piracy patrol and the Philippines urged foreign ship owners Thursday to use only safe routes patrolled by the US.

More than two dozen ships have been seized by pirates this year off the Horn of Africa, including an arms-laden Ukrainian ship for which pirates have demanded a $8-million ransom.

The hijacking of the Ukrainian freighter carrying a cargo of heavy weapons has heightened concern over the chaos in a key shipping route and prompted Nato to send warships to help US Navy vessels already
patrolling the region.

Somalia, which has had no functioning government since 1991, is the world’s top piracy hot spot. It is located along the Gulf of Aden, which connects the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean and is one of the
world’s busiest waterways with about 20 000 ships passing through it each year.

So far, 29 ships have been hijacked this year off the African coast.

The latest is a Panamanian-flagged bulk carrier seized in the Gulf of Aden on Wednesday with a crew of 21, according to Noel Choong of the
Malaysia-based International Maritime Bureau’s piracy reporting centre. – Sapa-AP