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. November 25, 2008 2:30 pm Link
So? If it’s in enemy hands, it’s an enemy ship. No one thought the pirates built this ship themselves, did they?
— RAC
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4. November 25, 2008 2:42 pm Link
If the ship was not in pirates’ control, why was no SOS sent out? How come the Indian Naval Ship received threatening calls if the target was just an innocent trawler? Last (but not the least) why did the supposed trawler blow up after being hit by a few Gatling rounds? Does “fishing equipment” include ammo/explosives?
I am not buying this claim by the supposed owner unless he can answer these questions.
— ashish
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5. November 25, 2008 2:51 pm Link
Well..duh. Did somebody seriously expect that the pirates would be operating a purpose built warships, with pirate submarines circling ahead of pirate aircraft carriers? Of course it’s a bloody captured merchant ship with a bunch of armed thugs on board!
— Gregory
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9. November 25, 2008 3:06 pm Link
Let me see if I get this. The US and its NATO allies, as well as India and some others, have the best trained, best equipped navies in the world, with all manner of satellite technology and infrared whimwhams and whatnot, and they can’t deter a bunch of ragtag “pirates” tearing around in some Zodiacs and the stray Chris-Craft? I know some of the pirates are a bit more advanced than this, but what if we put some swabbies on a few freighters, with a few TOW missiles or whatever is hot these days, and and the next time these SOBs try their piracy, boom, down go the zodiacs and all that. I am sure I am oversimplifying, but this is really getting tired.
— Tom in Raleigh
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13. November 25, 2008 3:23 pm Link
I think what the owner was saying that action is “in progress”. Perhaps pirates are already in command but the hostages are still there and incapable to do anything else.
See below:
******
But it turns out now that the “mother ship” may not have been in pirate hands very long. According to the CNN report, the ship was the trawler Ekawat Nava 5, which had been headed from Oman to Yemen to deliver fishing equipment when it was attacked by pirates off the Horn of Africa, according to Wicharn Sirichaiekawat, owner of the Ekawat Nava 5. The pirates were still taking control of the ship when the Tabar moved in, he said.
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— “taking” control
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25. November 25, 2008 4:14 pm Link
Strange! What the owner was doing so long? Didn’t he know that his ship had been captured by the pirates? Or, he wants us to believe that it was being captured at that very moment when the Indian navy challenged them? Difficult to buy the story.
— pb
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