Somali pirates: $4 mln ransom paid for coal ship

MOGADISHU, (Reuters) – A helicopter dropped a $4  million ransom payment yesterday on to the deck of a Chinese  coal ship hijacked by Somali pirates in mid-October, a pirate  source on board the vessel said.

The De Xin Hai and its 25 crew were carrying about 76,000  tonnes of coal from South Africa to Mundra in India when it was  seized in an audacious attack by the gunmen some 700 miles east  of the Horn of Africa.

Heavily armed sea gangs from Somalia have made tens of  millions of dollars in ransoms hijacking vessels in the Indian  Ocean and strategic Gulf of Aden, which links Europe to Asia.

Patrols in the area by warships from several nations only  appear to have forced the pirates to hunt further from shore.

“A helicopter dropped the ransom money on to the ship. We  have received $4 million,” Hassan, one of the pirates on the De  Xin Hai, told Reuters by telephone to cheers in the background.

“We hope to disembark in a few hours,” he added.

“The crew is safe and, although they will not have their  freedom for a few more days, they are all happy now.”

The chaos in the waters off Somalia is a reflection of a  civil war on land that has killed 19,000 civilians since the  start of 2007 and driven 1.5 million from their homes,  triggering one of the world’s worst humanitarian emergencies.

Western security agencies say the drought-ridden nation has  become a safe haven for militants, including foreign jihadists,  who are using it to plot attacks across the region and beyond. The Oct. 19 hijacking of the De Xin Hai, which is owned by  Qingdao Ocean Shipping, a unit of China Ocean Shipping or COSCO,  was the first known seizure of a coal ship by Somali pirates.

Indian coal traders warned at the time that this might  encourage the gangs to seize other coal ships, since these dry  bulk carriers are smaller and have relatively small crews.

Experts say a higher risk of pirate attacks could disrupt an  expected increase in the volume of South African coal heading to  India after a boom in Indian demand over the last two years.