Warship appears off coast of Somalia
A WARSHIP appeared yesterday off the Somali coast near the location where seven Danish hostages are being held, but a Somali official warned that any rescue attempt could endanger the hostages.
The Danish family - a couple and their three children - were captured by pirates on February 24 in the Indian Ocean. Pirates say the Danes, including two crew members, have since been moved to Somalia's mainland.
Said Aden Ali, the mayor of the coastal village of Bandarbeyla, said a warship appeared 2 kilometers off shore yesterday and he feared a military rescue attempt.
"I warn against any action that could endanger the lives of the innocent hostages," he said. "Military actions should be the last resort. We're trying to solve the problem in a peaceful manner and with the help of clan elders."
Ali said the Danes are being held in a mountainous area called Hul Anod. Their captors, he said, only want money and will not pursue violence unless they feel threatened.
Pirates typically demand multimillion-dollar ransoms to release their hostages. The average ransom for a large shipping vessel is now near US$5 million, according to piracy experts.
When a British sailing couple held by pirates for 388 days were released in November, reports said a ransom around US$1 million was paid for their release.
The Danish yacht was captured only days after pirates killed four Americans held captive on their yacht. Their boat had been surrounded by four American warships, and pirates said the four were killed because the hijackers felt threatened.
Piracy has blossomed off East Africa despite the presence of an international flotilla of warships.
The Danish family - a couple and their three children - were captured by pirates on February 24 in the Indian Ocean. Pirates say the Danes, including two crew members, have since been moved to Somalia's mainland.
Said Aden Ali, the mayor of the coastal village of Bandarbeyla, said a warship appeared 2 kilometers off shore yesterday and he feared a military rescue attempt.
"I warn against any action that could endanger the lives of the innocent hostages," he said. "Military actions should be the last resort. We're trying to solve the problem in a peaceful manner and with the help of clan elders."
Ali said the Danes are being held in a mountainous area called Hul Anod. Their captors, he said, only want money and will not pursue violence unless they feel threatened.
Pirates typically demand multimillion-dollar ransoms to release their hostages. The average ransom for a large shipping vessel is now near US$5 million, according to piracy experts.
When a British sailing couple held by pirates for 388 days were released in November, reports said a ransom around US$1 million was paid for their release.
The Danish yacht was captured only days after pirates killed four Americans held captive on their yacht. Their boat had been surrounded by four American warships, and pirates said the four were killed because the hijackers felt threatened.
Piracy has blossomed off East Africa despite the presence of an international flotilla of warships.
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