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European blood
10-16-2011, 01:49 AM
The number of pirate attacks off the coast of Somalia has increased, and NATO is warning that pirates are once again ready to attack ships traveling through the Indian Ocean.


“In the last few years it has been the case that, come October, when the South West monsoon weakens, the pirates have been able to put to sea and we have seen the number of attacks on merchant vessels increase,” Rear Adm. Hank Ort said in a statement.

“We are warning vessels that reports show that there are pirate groups operating already in the Indian Ocean, Arabian Sea and Gulf of Aden. Our naval forces are not complacent and remain vigilant. Despite the lull in pirate attacks over the summer due to the monsoon, they have continued to patrol throughout the region,” he added.

During the last week of September there were three attacks and one approach in the southern Red Sea, two incidents of suspicious activity in the Gulf of Aden, one incident of suspicious activity in the Arabian Sea and a disruption of a whaler Pirate Action Group in the central Somali Basin, NATO reported.

Increased pirate activity continued during the weekend, with three ships reporting attacks Oct. 2 in the Gulf of Aden, the southern Somali Basin and the Arabian Sea. All three were safe after repelling the pirates.

NATO announced its continuing commitment to counter piracy by extending Operation Ocean Shield until December 2012.

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US, UK forces free Italian ship from Somali pirates

ROME, Italy — British and US commandos have raided a hijacked Italian vessel off the coast of Somalia, capturing the pirates and freeing the carrier's crew of 23, the Italian government said.

"The vessel has been freed... thanks to the joint intervention of two ships from the United States and British navies" operating as part of NATO's anti-piracy operations, Ocean Shield, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

The pirates, said to number 11, "gave themselves up and are being held in detention," the statement added.

Defence Minister Ignazio La Russa told journalists at a press conference on Tuesday that the US and British commandos had used helicopters to judge the danger a raid would pose to the crew, but had met no resistance from the pirates.

"A British helicopter flew over the bridge and the pirates gave themselves up immediately," he said.

"Some had already thrown their weapons into the sea," he added.

In London, the Ministry of Defence said the Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) vessel Fort Victoria boarded the MV Montecristo without opposition after responding to a call for help from the Italian ship and a US Navy frigate.

"Due to the presence of the warships, 11 suspected pirates on board the pirated vessel surrendered without force," an MoD spokesman said.

"We are relieved, but have not yet been able to contact the crew," said a spokesman for the Tuscany-based D'Alesio shipping company. "In the meantime we're contacting the families," he added.

The Montecristo was travelling from Liverpool to Vietnam with a cargo of scrap iron when it was captured about 620 miles east of the Somali coast on Monday, with a crew of seven Italians, 10 Ukrainians and six Indian nationals.

Four of the Italians were security guards but they were unarmed and served as look-outs for potential attacks, Italian media said.

"The crew used tricks out of a film, throwing a bottle in the sea" with an SOS message inside, La Russa said, adding that they had then barricaded themselves in.

"The pirates had made no demands... and will be handed over to the authorities," he added.

Italy's Foreign Minister Franco Frattini described the raid as "an important operation in international anti-piracy collaboration" and praised the British and American commandos for the mission's success.

Earlier on Tuesday, Italy's shipowners association Confitarma announced it was signing a protocol with the defence ministry to allow military forces to travel aboard ships in dangerous areas to ward off pirate attacks.

Ten teams of six Italian marines will be on standby to be stationed on vessels sailing in risk areas.

Pirates have hijacked several Italian vessels this year.

On April 21 Somali pirates captured an Italian cargo ship headed for Iran with 21 crew on board, including six Italians, in the Arabian Sea near Oman.

And in February, pirates wielding rocket-launchers seized a large Italian oil tanker with a crew of five Italians and 17 Indians east off the Yemeni island of Socotra in the Indian Ocean.

After that attack, Italy's Confitarma called for ships to have armed guards aboard.

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