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Africa Horn |
S Arabia may use 'force' against pirates |
2008-11-21 |
![]() On November 15, the US Navy reported the capture of the tanker and its reportedly Saudi, Filippino, Polish, Croatian and British crew by the bandits southeast of the Kenyan port city of Mombasa. The 330-meter long tanker was sailing under a Liberian flag while possessed by the Saudi oil firm Aramco. It was heading for the United States through the Cape of Good Hope. Alarmed by the incident, the country has begun a security study of its tankers and cargo vessels which happen to cross the trouble-ridden Gulf of Aden. No immediate plans had been devised, the official however, added. The pirates, with their increased firepower, have become the shipping companies' nemesis prompting the international community to subject the trouble-ridden waters to strict naval surveillance. Somalia's territorial waters, posing the utmost threat, have witnessed more than 80 cases of piracy this year alone. Protraction of the standoff would prompt the vessels crossing the area to seek protection from regional watchdogs which could "cause a large rise in transport expenses for importers," said the Transport and Marine Services Committee member Yousuf Al-Turki. |
Posted by:Fred |
#4 That would send a rather unambiguous message to the rapscallions. |
Posted by: bigjim-ky 2008-11-21 17:47 |
#3 What are the odds they have been negotiating with Blackwater since Day One? |
Posted by: Sherry 2008-11-21 10:59 |
#2 Correction: 'S Arabia may use OPF against pirates' (OPF = 'other people's forces') |
Posted by: logi_cal 2008-11-21 10:02 |
#1 Force against a ship where one is not even allowed to smoke a cigarette on? |
Posted by: ed 2008-11-21 08:07 |