This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/england/kent/8327416.stm
The article has changed 12 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Pirates 'seize UK yacht couple' | Pirates 'seize UK yacht couple' |
(20 minutes later) | |
A search and rescue operation is being carried out for a British couple who have disappeared while sailing their yacht in the Seychelles. | A search and rescue operation is being carried out for a British couple who have disappeared while sailing their yacht in the Seychelles. |
Paul and Rachel Chandler, aged 58 and 55, of Tunbridge Wells, Kent, were heading for Tanzania in their yacht, the Lynn Rival. | |
They sent a distress signal on Friday but have not been heard from since. | They sent a distress signal on Friday but have not been heard from since. |
There has been an unconfirmed report that Somali pirates have admitted seizing the yacht. | There has been an unconfirmed report that Somali pirates have admitted seizing the yacht. |
The news agency Reuters said the pirates were taking the vessel back to Somalia. | The news agency Reuters said the pirates were taking the vessel back to Somalia. |
'Found nothing' | 'Found nothing' |
A pirate called Hassan told the agency: "The British couple are in our hands now. We captured them as they were touring in the Indian Ocean." | A pirate called Hassan told the agency: "The British couple are in our hands now. We captured them as they were touring in the Indian Ocean." |
The two captives were healthy and ransom demands would follow, he added. | The two captives were healthy and ransom demands would follow, he added. |
A Foreign and Commonwealth Office spokeswoman said it could not confirm whether pirates were involved. | A Foreign and Commonwealth Office spokeswoman said it could not confirm whether pirates were involved. |
"We are in touch with the family in the UK and the Seychelles coastguards which continues to monitor the situation and has conducted a search of the area," she added. | "We are in touch with the family in the UK and the Seychelles coastguards which continues to monitor the situation and has conducted a search of the area," she added. |
Britain's Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said the couple's distress beacon was activated at 2300 BST on Friday. | Britain's Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said the couple's distress beacon was activated at 2300 BST on Friday. |
There have been reports that they were hijacked by pirates but no one can prove that Seychelles Coast Guard spokesman | |
They were on a 150 nautical-mile passage south-west to the Amirante Islands, en route to Tanzania when they used the Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon (EPIRB). | They were on a 150 nautical-mile passage south-west to the Amirante Islands, en route to Tanzania when they used the Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon (EPIRB). |
The route would have taken Paul and Rachel Chandler near Somali waters which are notorious for pirate attacks on ships and smaller boats. | |
It is understood that there had been pirate activity in the area earlier in the day. | It is understood that there had been pirate activity in the area earlier in the day. |
A MCA spokesman said: "The Seychelles authorities are carrying out a search and rescue operation but have found nothing so far. | |
"It would appear from the activation of the EPIRB that something has happened. | |
"We were aware that the EPIRB had gone off, talked to the Seychelles, asked if they were aware of it, they were, and have been searching, by air and sea." | |
A spokesman for the Seychelles Coast Guard said they had not heard from the couple, who were out of reach by satellite phone. | |
He said: "There have been reports that they were hijacked by pirates but no one can prove that. We don't know what has happened and cannot speculate." | |
The couple - who have been sailing around the world for several years after selling up in the UK - previously wrote of "the Somali pirate problem" that delayed other voyages to Tanzania. |