PARIS (AP) - French soldiers successfully
defended two fishing boats from capture by pirates in the Indian
Ocean on Saturday, and 11 men suspected of involvement in
the failed attack were pursued at sea and captured, officials said.
The chain of events illustrated the teamwork in the international community to
crack down on piracy in the Indian Ocean, where
pirates cruise the waters searching for boats to hijack for ransoms.
After French soldiers chased away the pirates, the coast guard of the Seychelles
archipelago, south of where the attack took place, chased the assailants. The
coast guard captured two boats - a small craft with eight men aboard and a
larger ship carrying three that was the pirates' suspected mothership,
said Jacqueline Sherriff, chief press officer for the
maritime unit of NATO in Northwood, outside London.
It was not clear how many pirates had been involved in the attack, and whether
any got away. The nationality of the suspects was not known, but Somali pirates
are active in the Indian Ocean.
The two tuna trawlers, the Drennec and Glenan, were heading toward the Seychelles after
a fishing trip when they were attacked. The pirates approached at sunrise, when
they were about 300 kilometres (190 miles) north of the Seychelles, said
French military spokesman Rear Adm. Christophe Prazuck. French soldiers stationed aboard the fishing boats
first tried to warn the pirates away with flares and warning shots. But once
the pirates used their weapons, the soldiers returned fire, Prazuck
said. The pirates then fled.
All those aboard the French boats were unharmed, but it was not clear if any
pirates were injured, he said.
Piracy in the region soared as the rule of law crumbled in Somalia and
organized criminal gangs ramped up the lucrative business of holding ships,
their crews and cargos to ransom. After dozens of attacks last year, French
President Nicolas Sarkozy called for tougher action
against pirates.
France's
government has been stationing military escorts aboard French fishing boats off
East Africa since July to
protect them from gangs of Somali pirates. Saturday was the first time the
soldiers used their weapons in such operations, Prazuck
said.
One of the fishing boats involved in Saturday's incident - the Drennec - had already escaped a rocket attack by pirates in
September 2008, an event that led the fishing industry to ask for military
protection.
France is a
key member of the EU's naval mission, Operation Atalanta, fighting Somali pirates in the area, which has
aggressively tracked and caught suspected pirates.
France is,
however, the only nation to station military escorts aboard its fishing boats
in the region, though Spain's
fishing industry has petitioned its government unsuccessfully for similar help.
About 10 French fishing vessels are currently under military protection, Prazuck said. Cable-laying ships have used on-board
military escorts as well.
On Wednesday, the French military foiled another attack by pirates, under
different circumstances. Somali pirates fired on a French navy vessel - after
apparently mistaking it for a commercial boat. The French ship gave chase and
captured five suspects.
Source: AP, Oct 10, 2009