Kuwait Times

Somali pirates free Bangladesh­i ship after ransom paid

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Somali pirates freed a Bangladesh-flagged cargo vessel and its 23 crew early Sunday after sackloads of US dollars were air-dropped to them in ransom, the company and relatives said. The bulk carrier MV Abdullah was transporti­ng more than 55,000 tons of coal from Maputo to the United Arab Emirates when it was seized by dozens of pirates around 550 nautical miles (1,000 kilometers) off the Somali coast a month ago.

The seizure came amid a surge in Somali pirate activity, with internatio­nal naval forces diverted from the Gulf of Aden into the Red Sea to guard against attacks on shipping by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels. Negotiatio­ns for the ship’s release were led by Meherul Karim, CEO of its owners KSRM.

“The pirates called us when they reached near the Somalia coast” and one of them spoke English, he told reporters in Chittagong on Sunday. “He communicat­ed with us till we finalized the negotiatio­n,” he added. “We will not discuss or reveal the amount of ransom money.”

Video footage had been provided to show all the crew were safe, and early Sunday around 65 pirates left the ship on nine boats, he said. The MV Abdullah was on its way to its original destinatio­n escorted by two European Union ships, he said, and the pirates had given the crew a letter of safe passage in Somali promising “the ship would not come under any more attacks by pirates until it reached Dubai port”.

Fahmida Akter Anny, wife of the ship’s master Mohammed Abdur Rashid, said her husband told her an airplane dropped three sacks filled with US dollars to the pirates before circling the vessel three times. “After receiving the money, they released all crew,” she said. “My husband was happy.”

The vessel’s capture came after the first successful case of Somali piracy since 2017 was recorded in December. A series of incidents since then has fueled concerns about a resurgence of Indian Ocean raids by opportunis­tic pirates exploiting a security gap after the redeployme­nt of internatio­nal forces.

Houthi gunmen have launched scores of attacks in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden targeting what they deem to be Zionist-linked vessels in response to the Zionist entity’s war on Gaza. Naval forces — including from India, Sri Lanka and the Seychelles — have since freed fishing boats seized by gunmen and thwarted other attempted attacks.

Last month, Indian commandos boarded and recaptured the vessel seized in December, the Maltese-flagged MV Ruen, around 260 nautical miles (480 kilometers) off the Somali coast. All 17 hostages were rescued and 35 alleged pirates were brought to Mumbai to face prosecutio­n. Analysts say that the Somali pirate threat remains well below its 2011 peak, when gunmen launched attacks as far as 3,655 kilometers from the Somali coast in the Indian Ocean. It fell off sharply after internatio­nal navies sent warships and commercial shipping deployed armed guards.

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