The Manila Times

Indian navy rescues 19 crew after pirate hijack

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NEW DELHI: India’s navy said on Friday it had rescued 19 crew members aboard a fishing vessel hijacked off Somalia, the third such operation this week after a spate of attacks on shipping in the region.

A distress call from the Iranian-flagged FV Omari was received on Wednesday, and the Indian patrol boat INS Sharda intercepte­d the vessel in the “early hours” of Friday, a navy statement said.

“The ship has ensured successful release of the crew ... along with the boat,” it said. “The ship also undertook confirmato­ry boarding on FV Omari to sanitize and check on the well-being of the crew who had been held captive by the Somali pirates.”

Eleven Iranian and eight Pakistani crew members were aboard the vessel, the statement added.

Photograph­s published by the navy showed Indian naval commandos boarding a boat, which was emblazoned along its side with Iran’s national flag, in open waters.

One photo appeared to show one of the hijackers raising their hands in surrender.

Seven pirates had taken control of the ship, said the statement, which did not give details of whether the hijackers were detained.

It was the third time in the past week that Indian forces had intercepte­d Iranian-flagged fishing vessels in the area to rescue their crews from Somali hijackers.

Another patrol boat “compelled the safe release” of 19 crew members from the FV Al Naeemi overnight on Monday.

That operation came just 36 hours after India said its forces had freed 17 crew members aboard the MV Iman.

The hijackings off Somalia have fueled concerns about a resurgence of Indian Ocean raids by opportunis­tic pirates, coming on top of a separate surge in attacks launched by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels.

Houthi gunmen have launched scores of attacks in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden targeting what they deem to be Israeli-linked vessels in response to Israel’s war against the Palestinia­n militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Internatio­nal naval forces have been diverted north from the Gulf of Aden into the Red Sea, sparking fears that pirates will exploit the security gap, with the first successful case of Somali piracy since 2017 recorded in December.

Pirate attacks off the Somali coast peaked in 2011 — with gunmen launching attacks as far as 3,655 kilometers (2,270 miles) from the Somali coast in the Indian Ocean — before falling off sharply after internatio­nal navies sent warships and commercial shipping deployed armed guards.

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