Global

Somali forces free Panama ship from pirates

By Abdiqani Hassan

BOSASSO, Somalia (Reuters) - Somali security forces freed a Panamanian ship from pirates on Tuesday, officials said, two days after they killed one of the hijackers in a gun battle.

The Wail was seized by heavily armed Somali gunmen on Thursday as it carried cement to Bosasso from Oman. There are thought to be nine Syrian and two Somali crew members onboard.

"We have succeeded in saving the Panama-flagged ship and its crew," Ali Abdi Aware, state minister for the semi-autonomous northern Puntland region, told Reuters. "The pirates have surrendered and the ship is in our hands now."

Puntland's fisheries minister, Ahmed Said Ow Nur, said 10 hijackers were arrested and two soldiers wounded in the raid.

"The ship is now sailing towards Bosasso," he told Reuters.

Another senior Puntland government official said the Wail had been slightly damaged during an earlier shoot-out on Sunday in which one pirate and one Somali soldier were killed.

Puntland security forces also seized two of the speedboats used by the gang during that operation, and had been surrounding the Panamanian-flagged vessel since then.

Somali pirates have hijacked more than 30 ships so far this year and received ransoms totalling $18-30 million (10-17 million pounds), making the waters off the Horn of Africa nation the world's most dangerous.

In the highest profile case for years, ransom talks are continuing after they seized a Ukrainian vessel, the MV Faina, which was loaded with 33 T-72 tanks and other weaponry.

Last week, the 26-nation NATO military alliance agreed to join anti-piracy operations by sending seven frigates this month to combat the hijackers and escort humanitarian aid ships.

This year's explosion of piracy has been mirrored by a wave of kidnappings onshore. In the latest incident, Osman Mohamed Hussein, a Kenyan working for the African Union peacekeeping force in Somalia, was abducted at gunpoint in the capital on Tuesday.

"He called me saying he is being held in Mogadishu. Then his phone was switched off," his wife, Asli Aden, told Reuters.

Somalia has been mired in civil conflict since 1991.

(Additional reporting by Abdi Sheikh in Mogadishu; Writing by Daniel Wallis; Editing by Giles Elgood)

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