MOGADISHU, Nov. 18 (Xinhua) -- The hijacked
Saudi-owned supertanker has anchored off the coast of northeastern Somalia while
eight pirates escaped from prison in the semi-autonomous Somali region of
Puntland, officials said Tuesday.
The Sirius Star, capable of
carrying 2 million barrels of crude oil, along with its international crew of
25, was hijacked over the weekend by Somali pirates 450 miles off the coast of
the Kenyan port town of Mombasa and has since been heading towards the Somali
port town of Harard here in Puntland.
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Saudi-owned crude oil supertanker "Sirius Star" is seen in this photograph taken in Rotterdam on October
17, 2008. Pirates who hijacked the Sirius Star off the east coast of
Africa are taking the vessel towards a Somali port, the U.S. Navy said
on Nov. 17, 2008. Picture taken October 17, 2008. The hijacked Saudi-owned supertanker has
anchored off the coast of northeastern Somalia. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
"We have reports that the tanker is now moored at
Harard here, near where the Ukrainian ship carrying the weapons is being
held,"Bile Mohamoud Qabobe, an adviser to the Puntland President told Xinhua by
phone from Bossaso, the commercial capital of the region.
"We are concerned about the close proximity between
the two ships which could cause disaster for both the local people, the crew on
both ships as well as the marine environment," Qabobe added.
Meanwhile, in Bossaso, eight
Somali pirates being held at the local central prison have escaped and are now
being pursued by the Puntland security forces, Qabobe said.
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Saudi-owned crude oil supertanker Sirius
Star is seen during its naming ceremony in South Korea in this undated
handout picture released on June 18, 2008 and obtained by Reuters on Nov.
18, 2008. . (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
He denied reports that the escapees included two of
nine pirates handed over to Puntland authorities by the French Navy in October.
Some reports from Puntland where piracy is rampant
said that the pirates, who are usually better equipped and trained than local
forces because of the huge ransom payout they get from hijacked ships, bribed
the prison guards for their escape.
The waters off Somalia's coast
are considered to be some of the world's most dangerous. Pirates have hijacked
more than 30 ships this year and attacked many more.
Most attacks have been in the Gulf of Aden between
Yemen and north Somalia, a major route leading to the Suez Canal linking Europe
and Asia.
Pirates hijack oil supertanker off
east Africa
BEIJING, Nov. 18 --
Somali pirates have captured a fully laden Saudi supertanker far off east
Africa, seizing the biggest vessel ever hijacked with a cargo of oil worth over
100 million U.S. dollars in an attack that pushed world crude prices higher.
The U.S. Fifth Fleet said the Sirius Star was being taken to the pirate haven of Eyl, in northern Somalia, on Monday.