Seoul says hijacked Singaporean ship released near Nigeria
A hijacked Singaporean oil tanker carrying 21 sailors was released on Sunday (Aug 3), a week after being seized by pirates in waters off Ghana in west Africa, Seoul’s foreign ministry said. The 3,200-tonne tanker, carrying a South Korean captain and chief engineer, was hijacked on July 26 off the southern coast of Ghana, the ministry said.
The vessel, which had loaded in the Pacific island nation of Kiribati, was also carrying 12 Chinese, one Singaporean and six Myanmar nationals, it said.
“All sailors are unhurt and it appears that some of their fuel has been stolen,” it said, adding the ship was released in waters off Nigeria. It did not say whether a ransom has been paid, but Yonhap news agency said the hijacking appeared to have been aimed at stealing fuel.
“There has been a sharp increase in piracy activities in waters off west Africa, but in most cases, (they) abandon the ships after taking oil, money, or valuables,” said a senior Seoul official quoted by Yonhap. “This case appears to be of a similar kind.”
Piracy off the western coast of Africa has been rising in recent years, with attackers targeting ships playing a key role in the region’s thriving oil industry. The International Maritime Bureau said west African piracy made up 19 percent of attacks worldwide last year, with Nigerian pirates accounting for 31 of the region’s 51 attacks – the most since 2008.
Source: CNA
- For the first time, tianjin Port realized the whole process of dock operati...
- From January to August, piracy incidents in Asia increased by 38%!The situa...
- Quasi-conference TSA closes as role redundant in mega merger world
- Singapore says TPP, born again as CPTPP, is now headed for adoption
- Antwerp posts 5th record year with boxes up 4.3pc to 10 million TEU
- Savannah lifts record 4 million TEU in '17 as it deepens port