News

Somalia cautions on face-off

  Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating
The pirated merchant ship MV Faina is seen from a U.S. Navy guided-missile cruiser on Monday. Somali pirates holding a Ukrainian ship carrying 33 tanks reiterated their demands for a $20 million ransom on Tuesday and denied three of their number had died in a shootout. Photo/REUTERS

The pirated merchant ship MV Faina as seen from a U.S. Navy guided-missile cruiser last week. Somalia has not been in contact with the pirates. Photo/REUTERS 

By OLIVER MATHENGE and JAMI MAKAN
Posted  Tuesday, October 7  2008 at  20:44

American and Russian naval forces have been asked to deal with the mv Faina pirates firmly, but cautiously, to protect the crew being held hostage aboard the Ukrainian vessel.

“The pirates are holding hostages… human lives are at stake. Ultimately, force could result in casualties,” warned Somali Foreign minister Ali Ahmed Jama in Nairobi on Tuesday.

Mr Jama said Somalia had not been in contact with the pirates. And because his government could not secure Somali waters, it was up to the international community to deal with people who made a living by hijacking ships and demanding ransom, he said.

On Tuesday, the pirates were reported to have revised their ransom demand from $20 million (Sh1.4 billion) to $8 million (Sh576 million), according to information on the Russia Today website.

This is the second time the figure is being scaled down. The pirates initially demanded $35 million (Sh2.5 billion).

Meanwhile, fresh evidence on the BBC website shows that the weapons aboard mv Faina were jointly acquired by the governments of Kenya and Southern Sudan.

A copy of the cargo manifest posted on the website indicates that the contract was issued on behalf of Southern Sudan, although the Kenyan Defence ministry is named as the consignee.

Contract numbers for the military ware including 33 tanks, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and anti-aircraft guns contain the initials GOSS.

Share This Story
Share

The document shows contracts numbers such as MOD/GOSS/T-72/06-07-5/9-1K, where the initials MOD are thought to represent Kenya’s Department of Defence and GOSS referring to the Government of South Sudan.

The information also corresponds with information on a bill of lading made available to the media by Government spokesman Alfred Mutua when the issue of ownership of the cargo first cropped up.

In a related development, an international think tank says the rise in piracy off the coast of Somalia is boosting terrorism and threatening global trade.

The Royal Institute of International Affairs notes that more than 60 ships had been attacked as at September 25.