Four Thai fishermen held hostage by Somalian pirates for nearly five years have been released, Somalian officials said on Friday.
“We collected the four Thailand men from a remote area,” Galmudug administration official Omar Sheikh Ali said.
The four fishermen were among 24 crew members seized in April 2010 when pirates hijacked the Taiwan-flagged fishing vessel FV Prantalay 12. Their nearly five-year captivity is the longest suffered by any victims of Somalian piracy.
Photo: AFP
Ali said the relieved men were able to contact family members soon after their release on Wednesday.
“They called their families by phone and cried and cried and cried,” he said.
Residents of Galkayo, where the Galmudug administration is based, said a US$150,000 ransom was paid but the information could not be independently verified.
“The pirates were fed up of feeding and taking care of the hostages, they had borrowed huge sums of money,” said Mohamed Abdi, a businessman in Galkayo, who was close to the negotiations.
After its capture the FV Prantalay 12 was used as a pirate mother ship to launch attacks far out to sea before it capsized in July 2011 and the crew was taken ashore. Of the original 24 crew members, six died from sickness during their captivity.
Another 14 crew from Myanmar were released to the government in Somalia’s northern Puntland region in May 2011 and repatriated by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime Hostage Support Program. A further 26 hostages are still being held by Somali pirates.
Somalian pirate activity reached its height in 2011 when there were 237 incidents attributed to Somalian pirates and 28 vessels hijacked.
However, a combination of armed guards aboard vessels and international naval patrols have had a big impact and last year there were no successful hijackings, according to the International Maritime Bureau which tracks piracy incidents worldwide.
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