Ransom frees Turkish ship from pirate clutch
Agence France-Presse
"An agreement was reached after lengthy negotiations," Fehmi Ülgener, a lawyer for the Istanbul-based Yasa Company, told AFP, declining to say how much ransom money was paid."Our ship was released on Tuesday evening and is sailing towards safe waters," said the lawyer, adding that the 20 Turkish crew members of the ship were "well and in good spirits."
The M/V Yasa Neslihan, which is sailing under the Marshall Islands flag, was transporting 77,000 tons of iron ore from Canada to China when it was hijacked in the Gulf Of Aden on October 29. Ülgener said the vessel would continue on its route to China.
Piracy is rife and well organised in the area where Somalia's northeastern tip juts into the Indian Ocean, preying on a key maritime route leading to the Suez Canal. The pirates operate high-powered speedboats and are heavily armed, sometimes holding ships for weeks until they are released for large ransoms paid by governments or owners.
Two other Turkish ships are among about a dozen vessels the pirates are currently holding.
More than 100 ships were hijacked in 2008 off the coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden, according to the International Maritime Bureau, or IMB.
The pirates are estimated to have raked in $120 million in ransom money.