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Japanese ship hijacked in Africa | Japanese ship hijacked in Africa |
(about 6 hours later) | |
Pirates have hijacked a Japanese ship off the East African coast - the latest in a series of similar incidents near the war-torn country of Somalia. | Pirates have hijacked a Japanese ship off the East African coast - the latest in a series of similar incidents near the war-torn country of Somalia. |
The vessel, thought to be a chemical tanker with a crew of South Koreans, Filipinos and Burmese, was seized in the Gulf of Aden early on Sunday. | |
Officials say they are trying to find out what the pirates' demands are. | Officials say they are trying to find out what the pirates' demands are. |
The area is notorious for piracy - of 16 reported hijackings worldwide this year, 11 were off the Somali coast. | The area is notorious for piracy - of 16 reported hijackings worldwide this year, 11 were off the Somali coast. |
Lawless waters | Lawless waters |
The International Maritime Bureau (IMB) said it had received a distress call from the vessel near to the remote Yemeni island of Socotra on Sunday morning. | |
"We tried to contact the vessel, but there was absolutely no contact," the IMB's Cyrus Mody told BBC News. | "We tried to contact the vessel, but there was absolutely no contact," the IMB's Cyrus Mody told BBC News. |
He said coalition forces in the area were contacted and they confirmed the ship had been taken into Somali territorial waters. | |
There are thought to be 23 crew members on board the vessel, none of whom is Japanese. | There are thought to be 23 crew members on board the vessel, none of whom is Japanese. |
The incident comes two weeks after a cargo ship was hijacked on its way to Mombasa in Kenya. | The incident comes two weeks after a cargo ship was hijacked on its way to Mombasa in Kenya. |
The IMB said there was still no information on the safety of that crew. | |
Analysts say Somali waters are increasingly lawless and merchant ships are advised to stay 320km (200 miles) from its shores. | |
The IMB rates Somalia as the second most high risk country for piracy in the world after Indonesia. |
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