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Ver la versión completa : Pirates attack, hijack Indian Ocean Explorer live-aboard scuba diving boat



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5th April 2009, 20:29
A live-aboard scuba diving tourist boat popular with British diving enthusiasts carrying a crew of seven has been boarded by Somali pirates near the Seychelles, hundreds of miles from the hijackers' lair on the East African coast.
The Indian Ocean Explorer had just dropped her passengers on Assumption Island when she was attacked, according to Kirk Green, director of Aquatours, the London-based tour operator that books diving trips on the yacht.
He said that the Royal Navy had e-mailed to tell him that the vessel had been hijacked and would be taken to Harardhere, a pirate stronghold north of Mogadishu. He had been told to expect that she would be held about three months.
"Obviously one of the feelings we have is relief because none of our clients were taken," Mr Green said. "But on the other hand, we are extremely concerned about our crew."
All seven crew members were from the Seychelles, he added.
The attack happened last weekend, according to the US Navy, but news of it has only just come to light.
Somali pirates have turned swaths of the Indian Ocean into no-go areas for unescorted ships over the past year but the latest attacks suggest that they are venturing further afield — about 630 miles from their bases — to evade an international flotilla of warships.
In November the Sirius Star, a Saudi-owned oil tanker, was hijacked 520 miles off the Kenyan coast, a dramatic illustration of how the pirates are flouting the campaign against them.
"We believe the vessel is heading north towards Somalia," said Andrew Mwangura, who monitors piracy for the East African Seafarers' Assistance Programme in Mombasa, Kenya. "Maybe they are shifting in order to pull military escorts away from the Gulf of Aden, so they can go back to attacking shipping there."
The Indian Ocean Explorer was built to operate as an oceanographic survey ship in the North Sea before being kitted out as a cruiser specialising in diving trips around the Seychelles and Madagascar.
The vessel makes only a handful of voyages each year for up to 12 passengers willing to pay to swim with whale sharks and green turtles. Mr Green said that she was registered in Panama and had been recently sold, but could not confirm the identity or nationality of the new owners.

The Seychelles coral archipelago offers some of the best diving in the world and its pristine beaches lure thousands of tourists each year. Now the islands' Government is deploying security forces to its outer islands after the latest incident, the second such hijacking in a month.
"Our forces are ready for any eventualities," said Brigadier Leopold Payet, the islands' military chief.
The number and success rate of pirate attacks has declined slightly this year, thanks to unfavourable seas and a greater foreign naval presence in the Gulf of Aden. Somali pirates attacked more than 130 merchant ships in the gulf and the Indian Ocean last year, according to the International Maritime Bureau, a sharp increase on previous years.
On Tuesday Japan joined the US, China and EU states in patrolling shipping lanes leading to the Suez Canal. They face a daunting task trying to protect 400,000 square miles of sea from the fast-moving pirate skiffs. Two European-owned tankers were seized within 24 hours last month and are heading to Somali coastal havens.
"I don't understand why the countries involved don't just go down there and sort it out once and for all," Mr Green said.