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Saudi owner paid pirates $2.6m to free ship crew

Published: 15 May 2013 - 03:14 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 10:06 am

 

ALGIERS: The Saudi owner of an Algerian cargo ship whose crew were held by Somali pirates for 10 months admitted paying $2.6m to free them in November 2011, an Algerian paper reported yetserday.

The MV Blida, carrying 17 Algerians, six Ukrainians, two Filipinos, one Jordanian and one Indonesian, was captured by a gang of heavily armed pirates on January 1, 2011, on its way from Oman to Tanzania.

Two of hostages were released for health reasons in October that year, with the rest freed the following month when a bag full of cash was parachuted from a plane.

“The pirates demanded a ransom of $2.6m to free the sailors and the ship. The Algerian government refused to negotiate or pay a ransom,” owner Ghaith Rashad Feraoun told Arabic daily Ennahar.

“I thought of the sailors. I had no interest in freeing the bulk carrier and cement on board, as it was 100 percent insured and the insurance companies were going to reimburse me,” he said.

“I negotiated through a man called Abu Ali or Abu Ahmed. After agreeing with the pirates on the amount, I paid a one off payment in cash. I withdrew the money from Lebanon, because it’s the only country where you can get that amount without encountering obstacles,” Feraoun explained.

“We took a small plane and threw the money onto the ship,” he said, adding that “Algeria didn’t pay a single dinar.”

Algeria has a policy of not negotiating with hostage-takers and has asked the UN General Assembly to criminalise ransom payments to pirates.

AFP