Monday, February 2, 2009

The Story Of A Ship Owner Whose Ship Has been Hijacked By Somali Pirates

Hijacked On The High Seas
-- Wall Street Journal


When Somali Pirates Attacked, They Kicked Off 56 Days of Drama Over the Fate of a Ship and 28 Crewmen.

A few hours after dawn on the Friday after Thanksgiving, a speedboat carrying five men with AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenades raced toward a massive tanker in the Gulf of Aden. They fired at the ship as they approached, denting the hull.

The skinny, barefoot men wearing T-shirts and shorts hitched an aluminum ladder to the railing and scampered up to the deck. They shot through a window of the bridge, which the crew had locked. The ship's captain hit the distress button.

At 12:05 a.m. that day, James Christodoulou awoke to the ringing of the bedside phone in his New Jersey apartment. Pirates had captured his company's tanker, the MV Biscaglia, a company security official told him.

"Say that again?" Mr. Christodoulou replied.

The news thrust the 48-year-old chief executive of Industrial Shipping Enterprises Corp., a tiny Stamford, Conn.-based company, and the crew of 28 men onto the front lines of a rash of piracy targeted at huge ships sailing off the coast of Somalia en route to the Suez Canal.

Read more .....

More News On Somali Piracy

Nine countries sign deal to fight Somali piracy -- AFP
Who do pirates call to get their cash? -- BBC
Japan Puts Warships on Notice for Somalia Piracy Deployment -- Voice Of America
French navy hands over nine suspected pirates to Somali authorities -- China View
Pirate Attacks Cut Dramatically by Navies, U.S. Admiral Says -- Bloomberg
Backgrounder: Combating Maritime Piracy -- New York Times

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