The National - News

FAMILIES BREATHE SIGH OF RELIEF AS PIRATES FREE 23 BANGLADESH­I SAILORS

▶ Cargo ship MV Abdullah and its crew set to reach Dubai next week after ransom paid to Somali gunmen

- RAMOLA TALWAR BADAM

Relatives of 23 hostages on a cargo ship seized by armed Somali pirates have expressed relief and happiness that the men were released after more than a month in captivity.

The freed sailors sent text messages and called their families in Bangladesh after the 65 pirates released the Bangladesh-flagged MV Abdullah on Sunday after a ransom payment was made.

The crew is safe, the ship is being escorted by naval vessels and is set to reach Dubai’s Al Hamriya port next Monday, the shipping company told The National.

Crew members told their families they were held at gunpoint on the bridge over the weekend while the ransom was being checked by the pirates.

The men were released after a payment of $5 million was made, local officials in Somalia said. The shipping company declined to give details of the hostage negotiatio­ns.

“We were in a very bad state, we were in a lot of tension for weeks after my husband’s ship was hijacked,” said Jannatul Ferdous, wife of Mohammad Nooruddin, the ship’s steward.

“I’m so happy after he called to say they are all fine. They were scared and we were also scared but now it’s over. It was too much tension and worry.”

The men are expected to reach Dubai early next Monday, after which they will decide whether to return home to Bangladesh or continue on their voyage.

Pirates wielding AK-47 assault rifles boarded the cargo ship on March 12, when it was carrying 55,000 tonnes of coal from Maputo, Mozambique, to the UAE. The vessel was about 920km from the Somali coast when it was hijacked.

The men were allowed to call their families from the ship’s satellite phone after they were captured.

Mehrul Karim, chief executive of SR Shipping, part of the Bangladesh-based KSRM Group, confirmed the crew was safe, but declined to talk about the value of the ransom that was paid.

“Everybody is fine, the crew have been checked by navy doctors and their physical condition is fine,” Mr Karim said.

“They are in good spirits and we expect the ship to arrive early on April 22 at Al Hamriya. Navy vessels are following the ship in the high-risk areas before it comes into Dubai.”

This is the second time that a vessel owned by the group has been hijacked by Somali pirates.

In March 2011, pirates released 26 hostages from the MV Jahan Moni after 100 days in captivity.

Mr Karim was part of the team that negotiated the release of the crew more than a decade ago.

Relatives of the MV Abdullah crew said the sailors were jubilant and could speak freely, in sharp contrast to the terror they had experience­d during the hijacking.

“In the 33 days they felt they could die at any time, and now they are safe,” Mainul Hoque said of his brother, Ainul Hoque, an engineer who was among the hostages.

“They are very happy now, they are talking in high voices.

“My brother said, ‘We don’t have to speak softly and hide our voices any more. There was not one day we were not scared.’ He said the pirates took them at gunpoint to the bridge when they were counting money.

“After they counted the money, they left.”

It is not clear how the ransom was delivered, but in similar cases in the past, helicopter­s and small boats have been used to carry cash to vessels captured by pirates.

The crew’s release on Sunday coincided with Pohela Boishakh, new year in the Bengali calendar.

“Exactly the same day they were released, we celebrated new year,” said Mr Hoque.

“So now we are celebratin­g Eid and Boishakh. It’s a special time for us.”

Consumed by worry, families did not celebrate Eid last week, waiting instead for their captured loved ones to return home.

“My brother’s daughters say, ‘My father is free, my father is free,’” said Mohammad Asif. His brother, Mohammed Atikullah, is the ship’s 35-year-old chief officer.

“They ask me why I’m not smiling.

“I will smile when he comes home.”

The pirates had seized laptops and mobile phones from the men and returned a few phones before they left the ship.

Celebratio­ns are on hold until the men come home, their relatives have said.

“My mother has been tense every day after my brother was captured,” Mr Asif said.

“When she heard they were released, she cried and gave thanks to God.

“We told my brother the whole country was praying for them.

“This is the best news to get. We feel like today is our Eid day.”

The seizure of the MV Abdullah came amid a surge in Somali piracy, with internatio­nal navies having shifted their focus to the Red Sea to guard against attacks on vessels carried out by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels.

The Houthis’ campaign, which began in November, has prompted a series of attacks by Somali pirates in the Indian Ocean. Navies from India, Sri Lanka and several European states have freed boats seized by gunmen.

 ?? SR Shipping ?? The MV Abdullah and its crew are being escorted by naval vessels to Al Hamriya port in Dubai
SR Shipping The MV Abdullah and its crew are being escorted by naval vessels to Al Hamriya port in Dubai

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