The captured pirates are due to arrive in India on Saturday and
will be handed over to the law enforcement agencies, the
official said. He declined to be identified as he was not
authorized to speak to the media.
The exact charges against the pirates were not immediately
clear, he added.
Indian navy commandos managed to release the Malta-flagged
commercial ship MV Ruen on Saturday, which had been hijacked 450
nautical miles east of Socotra in the northern Arabian Sea by
Somali pirates on Dec 14.
It marked the first hijacking of a merchant ship by Somali
pirates since 2017. At the peak of their attacks in 2011, Somali
pirates cost the global economy an estimated $7 billion,
including hundreds of millions of dollars in ransom payments.
During the piracy peak, India's navy used to prosecute and jail
in India pirates involved in major attacks, but in recent months
the navy has taken to leaving the pirates at sea. The Ruen
pirates will be the first India prosecutes in years, the
official added.
India has deployed at least a dozen warships in the Gulf of Aden
and the northern Arabian Sea since December, which enables it to
assist vessels east of the Red Sea, where the navies of several
countries, including the United States, are trying to secure
shipping routes under attack from Yemen's Houthi militants.
The Indian official said that since the Ruen's hijacking, the
navy has kept the region under "continuous surveillance
activities" using its aerial platforms and information gathered
from other vessels it has been investigating.
On March 14 Ruen was spotted off the Somali coast, British
maritime security firm Ambrey said.
The navy official said that the pirates had converted Ruen into
a mother-ship, using boats to launch attacks on other vessels.
It was intercepted on March 15, the navy said in a statement on
Saturday.
Another merchant vessel, MV Abdullah was hijacked off Somalia
last week, and Somali forces were planning to attack with
foreign navies.
(Reporting by Krishn Kaushik; editing by Miral Fahmy)
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