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Somali pirates free Philippine tanker, 23 crew

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[April 21, 2009]  MANILA, Philippines (AP) -- Somali pirates freed a chemical tanker and its 23 Filipino crew members Tuesday after holding them hostage in the Gulf of Aden for more than five months, the ship owner and officials said.

The release came a day after a separate group of bandits freed the Lebanese-owned food aid freighter MV Sea Horse after receiving $100,000 from Somali businessmen. At least 16 other ships with nearly 300 crew remain in the hands of Somali pirates.

The Philippine company Sagana Shipping Inc. declined to say whether it paid any ransom for Tuesday's release of its ship, MT Stolt Strength.

Securing the safe release of the vessel and crew was "difficult and protracted" and the company was "extremely pleased" with the result, Sagana spokesman Dexter Custodio said in a statement.

"They have been released, thank God!" said Doris Deseo, wife of Carlo Deseo, the ship's 31-year-old third mate. "They are no longer in the hands of the pirates. I am super happy. That's the only thing we have been waiting for."

The Stolt Strength was seized Nov. 10, 2008 by pirates in the Gulf of Aden while it was carrying a cargo of phosphoric acid from Dakar, Senegal, to Kandla, India, Custodio said. Earlier reports had said the ship was heading to Japan.

Analysts blame Somalia's nearly 20 years of lawlessness for fueling piracy's rise. Attacks have risen markedly in recent weeks, including one on Monday when pirates fired rockets at a Maltese-flagged ship of Yemen's coast. NATO warships scrambled helicopters in defense of the ship, and pirates escaped with no damage to the cargo ship.

NATO forces have helped fend off several attacks in recent days, but have released the culprits because they had no jurisdiction to arrest them. In some cases, neither the pirates nor their targets were nationals of NATO countries.

In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen met Monday and said they will seek authority for NATO to arrest pirates.

Family members of the Stolt Strength crew told the AP that the Somali pirates earlier demanded $5 million but that the amount had been reduced to about $2.2 million last week.

Custodio said he could not comment on whether ransom was paid. "I have no idea because it was the company's crisis management team that has the data about that," he told The Associated Press.

A NATO spokesman said the ship would head to Mombasa, Kenya, arriving in about a week. One crew member needs medical attention, but does not have a serious problem, Lt-Cmdr. Alexandre Santos Fernandes said.

"The main concern now is to refuel the ship," Fernandes said.

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Eduardo Malaya, spokesman for the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs, said the ship was released around 11:35 (0335 GMT) and was heading to "safer waters" under escort of international ships.

Asuncion Pacheco, wife of 62-year-old ship captain Abelardo Pacheo, said she told by a company official that the amount of ransom paid to the pirates "will not be disclosed for the protection of the others," referring to other vessels still being held by the Somali gunmen.

Also Tuesday, an international maritime watchdog reported that attacks by sea worldwide nearly doubled in the first three months of 2009, mainly due to increased pirate raids on vessels in the Gulf of Aden and the east coast of Somalia.

The number of attacks surged to 102 in the first quarter compared to 53 incidents in the same period a year ago, and marked a 20 percent increase from the previous quarter, said the International Maritime Bureau's piracy reporting center in Kuala Lumpur.

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Meanwhile, the sole surviving Somali pirate from the hostage-taking of an American ship captain arrived in New York on Monday to face charges in the attack.

The suspect was taken aboard a U.S. Navy ship shortly before Navy SEAL snipers killed three of his colleagues who had held a commercial ship captain, Richard Phillips, hostage.

[Associated Press; By OLIVER TEVES]

Associated Press writer Katharine Houreld contributed to this report from Mombasa, Kenya. AP writer Eileen Ng contributed from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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