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Pirates demand £4m ransom as hostage drama turns political

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Published Date: 01 November 2009
SOMALI pirates holding a retired British couple have justified their demand for more than £4 million in ransom by claiming boats from other countries are plundering Somalia's fish-rich waters.
Last night the British government said that in line with current policy on the issue no ransom would be paid.

Ahmed Gadaf, spokesman for the captors, insisted the group holding the couple hostage off Somalia's coast was made up of "voluntary
guards", not pirates.

"Western forces continue to loot our natural resources. They continue to harass local fishermen and destroy their fishing nets, so we want them to taste the consequence," Gadaf said by satellite phone from the coastal town of Haradhere.

The British couple, Paul and Rachel Chandler, are safe and will not be harmed, Gadaf said, and will be released on payment.

The Chandlers, en route to Tanzania in their yacht, the Lynn Rival, sent a distress signal on 23 October.

Their empty yacht was found by a Royal Navy patrol on Thursday.

The couple have been in sporadic contact since their capture. In phone calls to television stations the couple have passed messages to relatives reassuring them that they are being looked after.

The statement from the pirates indicates a determination to politicise the situation and move the focus away from criminal activity.

Illegal fishing off the coast of Somalia stirs strong passions in the country.

In London, the prime minister of Somalia's transitional government, Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke, said that many pirates are former fishermen "responding to the loss and disappearance of their livelihoods".

"I shall not name names, but suffice to say many countries are fishing illegally in Somali waters," he added.

"We estimate that the value of the fish being taken from our waters is perhaps hundreds of millions of dollars.

"It is wholly unacceptable for these countries, many of whom claim they want to help Somalia, to turn a blind eye to this theft."

Rachel Chandler told her brother in a telephone call broadcast by ITV News on Friday that the pirates were "hospitable people".

Both the Foreign Office and Ministry of Defence declined to comment on whether any potential rescue was under consideration.

Pirate attacks have increased in recent weeks after the recent end of the monsoon season.





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  • Last Updated: 31 October 2009 10:34 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Piracy
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 01/11/2009 01:53:00

Pirates are Pirates, we Knew it would come to this, we are dealing with the mentally afflicted, calling themselves "voluntaryguards", I can think of another few names to call them, but it is Sunday, let us Pray that resolution will take place for the safety and the return of Paul and Rachel Chandler.

2

Jack Anory,

Somalia 01/11/2009 02:24:33
Yarrr.
3

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 01/11/2009 03:17:31

"£4m ransom", deranged they are!

4

,

01/11/2009 06:18:15
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 01/11/2009 12:08:06
"In London, the prime minister of Somalia's transitional government, Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke, said that many pirates are former fishermen "responding to the loss and disappearance of their livelihoods".

Some response! The sort that should be met with a square search along the coast of Somalia and a challenge to any vessel which is not identified. Any hostile response to be me with an immediate and much more devastating one. Any survivors picked up and jailed. Vessels destroyed. Then once the waters are cleared more it's to move inland and root out the perpetrators and their store of loot.

Mr and Mrs Chandler should have known better than go anywhere these waters - that just seems to be from a skipper perspective to be a non-starter. One has sympathy for their present plight but it must have been blindingly obvious that sailing there was highly dangerous and subject to their being captured and held for ransom.
6

Lys Alf,

Scotland 01/11/2009 13:25:09
While ransoms are being paid this will continue and eventually become violent. Naval patrols will not stop it.

The land support bases have to be attacked, the pirates know that the west is too weak to take this very necessary remedial action so they will continue to take ships and extort money from their spineless victims.

Eventually they will operate from within European seaways. Also, It just is a question of time before they will murder hostages if the ransom is deemed insufficient.

Why not, if you are too weak to defend your own interests you deserve to be a victim.

Weakness is always exploited, it is the natural order of things. Report Unsuitable

 

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