

United Kingdom Maritime
Trade Operations (UKMTO), which coordinates the management of all merchant
ships and yachts in the Gulf of Aden area, said it had received information
that a dhow en route to Bosasso from Dubai had been hijacked “in the vicinity
of Socotra (Island)”.
Pirates have hijacked an
Indian commercial ship off the coast of Somalia, the second attack in weeks
after years of inactivity by pirates, industry and security sources said on
Monday.
A spokesman said UKMTO was
unable to confirm the location of the vessel, which he identified as Al Kausar,
or what had taken place, and that investigations were ongoing.
“We understand Somali
pirates hijacked a commercial Indian ship and (it is heading) towards Somalia
shores,” Abdirizak Mohamed Dirir, a former director of the anti-piracy agency
in Somalia’s semi-autonomous Puntland region, told Reuters.
Somali pirates hijacked of
an oil tanker last month, the first commandeering of a vessel since 2012, but
released it after a fight with the Puntland marine force.
Somalis have been angered
recently by foreign fishermen flooding into their waters, some of whom have
been given licences to fish there by the Somali government.
Graeme Gibbon-Brooks of
UK-based Dryad Maritime Security said industry sources had told him the Indian
vessel was en route to Bosasso from Dubai when it was hijacked on Saturday.
The pirates were on board
and were taking the ship and its 11 crew members to Eyl in Puntland, he said.
India’s ministry of
external affairs told Reuters it could not confirm the hijack but some local
Indian media reported the ship was called Al Kaushar.
In a separate incident that
highlights increased pirate activity, UKMTO said on its website that early on
Monday, six skiffs had approached a vessel it did not identify and that ladders
and hooks were sighted.
The vessel raised alarm,
prompting armed guards to take position and the skiffs left, leaving the vessel
unharmed, UKTMO said.
(Additional reporting by
Katharine Houreld and George Obulutsa in Nairobi; Jonathan Saul in London and
Tommy Wilkes and Nidhi Verma in New Delhi; Writing by Elias Biryabarema;
Editing by Catherine Evans)

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