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Australian navy thwarts
Somali pirates: officials
Mogadishu Wednesday 23 Sep 2009 Shaaficiyah
An Australian warship intercepted Somali pirates
stalking a merchant ship in the Gulf of Aden and confiscated
a cache of weapons including a grenade launcher, officials
said Wednesday.
Commander Ivan Ingham said officers from his
ship HMAS Toowoomba boarded the pirate ship after responding
to a distress call in the Gulf on Sunday night.
A surveillance plane and helicopter sent ahead
of the Toowoomba confirmed reports from the merchant ship
BBC Portugal that it was being chased by a high-speed vessel
full of armed men, he said.
"On reaching the suspect vessel Toowoomba
launched her boarding team to investigate, search, disarm
and seize," Ingham said.
"The boarding party was instructed to
disarm the suspect pirates and confiscate their lethal military
weapons."
A rocket-propelled grenade launcher, six AK47
assault rifles and a G3 assault rifle were taken, as well
as a large quantity of ammunition.
The men said they were from Somalia but denied
planning to attack the Portugal, despite being seen disposing
of a ladder as the helicopter and plane approached, Ingham
said.
Once the pirate ship had been cleared of weapons
he said the Toowoomba confirmed it had sufficient food, water
and fuel for the return journey to Somalia and ordered them
out of the shipping zone.
"The quick response by HMAS Toowoomba
... ensured that the incident did not escalate into a direct
attack on the merchant vessel," said Ingham.
It was the ship's first such encounter since
arriving in the Gulf of Aden from the Northern Arabian Sea
on an anti-piracy mission two weeks ago, he added.
Pirates have carried out more than 100 attacks
in the key shipping lane that links the Indian Ocean with
the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal since the start of
this year.
Australia is among a raft of navies from around
the world that have sent vessels to the area to combat the
threat.
Source: AFP
Shaaficiyah Media
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