Tuh, apa kate ane, orang Islam itu emang ga bisa dipercaya.

Udah ngebajak dan minta tebusan, tebusan udah dibayar, sandera tetap ditawan. 
Orang Islam tambah pinter tuh namanya, pasti baru dpt wahyu dr auloh kayak nabi 
yg suka dpt wahyu unt ngehalalin ngerampok atau ngembat bini anak angkatnya 
atau 
zinah dgn sepupunya.


http://www.thenational.ae/featured-content/home/middle-headlines/pirates-take-ransom-but-keep-seven-crew-hostage


Pirates take ransom but keep seven crew hostage
Carol Huang 
Last Updated:  Apr 17, 2011
DUBAI // Seven Indian crewmen from a UAE-owned ship  seized by Somali pirates 
were still being held hostage last night  despite the payment of a ransom.
It is the first time pirates have  reneged on a ransom deal since they began 
capturing ships off the coast  of Somalia six years ago.
The remaining eight crew of the MV Asphalt  Venture, including the captain, are 
in control of the ship anchored off  the Somali town of Harardhere.
One of the pirates, who identified  himself as Ahmed, said they had been paid a 
$3.6 million (Dh13.2m)  ransom but kept seven crew hostage in retaliation for 
the capture of 120  pirates by Indian authorities in the past few months.
“We have taken  some of its Indian crew back because the Indian government is 
currently  holding our men. We need the Indian government to free our men so 
that  we can release their citizens,” he said. 

The 4,000-tonne vessel had  been en route to South Africa last September when 
it 
was seized about  100 nautical miles off the coast of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania.
The ransom was paid and the ship released at the weekend, but without six 
officers and one seaman. 

The  crew could not be reached yesterday by the Sharjah shipowner, Bitumen  
Invest AS, or the Indian ship manager, OMCI Ship Management.  

“It  was a done deal. Fifteen were supposed to be released,” said Sunil Puri,  
speaking on behalf of both companies. “We are taking all steps but as  of now 
we 
haven’t been able to re-establish contact with the pirates.”
The  surprise refusal to release the seven crewmen is another escalation in  
the 
struggle between the international community and Somali pirates, who  currently 
hold 26 vessels and 532 seafarers, according to the  International Maritime 
Bureau. 

Dozens of navies have set up joint  counter-piracy operations in the region, 
particularly in the Gulf of  Aden. In response the pirates have spread further 
east and south into  the Indian Ocean. 

In recent months more navies operating  independently have attacked pirates on 
hijacked ships, often detaining  and sometimes killing them.
UAE Special Forces stormed a bulk carrier  hijacked in the Arabian Sea on its 
way from Australia to Jebel Ali this  month, rescued the crew and arrested the 
pirates.
Indian forces have  had four confrontations with pirates this year. After the 
third, in  March, a pirate named Bile Hussein warned that Indian hostages might 
 
face rougher treatment as a result. 

“They better release them,  considering their people travelling in the waters, 
or we shall jail  their people like that,” he said. “They have to be ready for 
their  citizens to be mistreated in the near future.” 

Kidnapped crewmen  have been facing rougher treatment since late last year. 
Some 
have  reported being hung upside down or dragged through the water, said Wing  
Cdr Paddy O’Kennedy, a spokesman for the counter-piracy EU Naval Force. 

“I wouldn’t say it’s the norm but it’s becoming more frequent,” he said.  
One  reason may be that, with pirates demanding higher ransoms, negotiations  
are taking longer and pirates are becoming frustrated and taking it out  on the 
hostages, he said. 

The average negotiation now lasts about seven months, according to Nato.
Another  reason may be that piracy is increasingly led by crime rings rather  
than fishermen upset by foreign vessels trespassing in their waters. 

“The  business model is so good that you’ve now got organised criminal gangs  
inside Somalia taking over the operations,” said Cdr O’Kennedy. 

“For  pirates who used to be fishermen, violence isn’t particularly part of  
their makeup,” he said. “These organised criminal gangs use violence as a  
matter of course.” 

The navies have few options to help the seven  captive seamen, he said. 
“Unfortunately these hostages now become just  the same as they were before the 
deal.” 


chu...@thenational.ae


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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