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Somali pirates seize two ships
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AFP 9 hours ago (September 18 2008)
MOGADISHU (AFP) — Somali pirates seized a Greek ship and a Hong Kong-flagged vessel in the latest in a string of attacks that have prompted calls for international action, officials said on Thursday.
Pirates armed with rockets seized the freighter Centauri with a crew of 25 Filipinos some 200 miles south of Mogadishu on Thursday.
"The pirates attacked and boarded the ship, she was en route to Kenya with a crew of 25 on board," said Noel Choong, head of the International Maritime Bureau's (IMB) Piracy Reporting Centre in Kuala Lumpur.
He said pirates were now targeting ships on the eastern side of Somalia.
Hijackers also took the Hong Kong-flagged Great Creation on Wednesday with its 25 crew -- 24 Chinese and one Sri Lankan. The ship was headed to the Indian port of Pipavav from Tunisia, said Andrew Mwangura who runs the Kenya chapter of the Seafarers Assistance programme.
Mwangura told AFP the ship was being taken to Eyl, a pirate lair in Somalia's northern breakaway state of Puntland.
A representative of the firm that owns Centauri said "all the crew are fine" but declined to give more details.
Meanwhile, a World Food Programme-chartered ship carrying some 4,000 tonnes of food aid arrived at Mogadishu port Thursday escorted by a Canadian frigate.
The Golina, escorted by the frigate Ville de Quebec, will spend four days offloading its cargo as the escort vessel returns to the Kenya port of Mombasa to escort a second ship.
According to the IMB, 55 ships have been attacked off Somalia since January and 11 are still being held for ransom when news of the Great Creation's capture was reported.
This week, French commandos freed a couple who were held hostage on their yacht in the region and French President Nicolas Sarkozy called for an international offensive against piracy.
Last year, the pirates had been operating on Somalia's east coast, but then shifted to the north, in the Gulf of Aden, before again recently switching back to the Indian Ocean.
Somalia's long coastline is infested with pirates, making the Gulf of Aden and neighbouring areas in the Indian Ocean among the most dangerous waters in the world.
In recent months, a Djibouti-based multinational taskforce has been patrolling the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea, where a pirate mothership is believed to be operating.
Mwangura of the Seafarers Assistance programme said the latest attack was evidence that pirates could play cat and mouse with foreign navies. "They are changing locations due to the heavy concentration of navy ships" near the Gulf of Aden, he told AFP.
Operating from wooden boats that are difficult to detect on radar, the heavily-armed former coast guards turned pirates flit along with ease.
"At times when the sea is rough, they are camouflaged by the waves," Simon Tousignant, the second-lieutenant of the Canadian frigate Ville de Quebec, told AFP on board the ship.
The Ville de Quebec has been escorting UN relief food from the Kenyan port of Mombasa to the war-riven Somali capital of Mogadishu since Tuesday.
The sea bandits, whose numbers Mwangura says have risen to about 1,000 elude capture due to their rapid and unpredictable attacks.
Once aboard, an operation that takes about 20 minutes, the hijackers are almost untouchable with hostages under their command.
"They've got at least two mother ships at sea and they launch speed boats from these two cargos (vessels) to hijack other ships," Mwangura explained.
With rampant piracy and rising insecurity in the Horn of Africa nation, sea transport is the last lifeline of some 3.2 million Somalis in need of food aid.
Somalia has been without an effective central authority since the 1991 ouster of president Mohamed Siad Barre set off a deadly power struggle.
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