Pirates fire on US cruise ship in hijack attempt
By ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY
Associated Press Writer

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -- Pirates chased and shot at a U.S. cruise liner
with more than 1,000 people on board but failed to hijack the vessel
as it sailed along a corridor patrolled by international warships, a
maritime official said Tuesday.

The liner, carrying 656 international passengers and 399 crew members,
was sailing through the Gulf of Aden on Sunday when it encountered six
bandits in two speedboats, said Noel Choong who heads the
International Maritime Bureau's piracy reporting center in Malaysia.

The pirates fired at the passenger liner but the larger boat was
faster than the pirates' vessels, Choong said.

"It is very fortunate that the liner managed to escape," he said,
urging all ships to remain vigilant in the area.

The International Maritime Bureau, which fights maritime crime, did
not know how many cruise liners use these waters.

The U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, based in Bahrain, said it was aware of the
failed hijacking but had no further details.

Ship owner Oceania Cruises Inc. identified the vessel as the M/S Nautica.

In a statement on its Web site, the company said pirates fired eight
rifle shots at the liner, but that the ship's captain increased speed
and managed to outrun the skiffs.

All passengers and crew are safe and there was no damage to the vessel, it said.

The Nautica was on a 32-day cruise from Rome to Singapore, with stops
at ports in Italy, Egypt, Oman, Dubai, India, Malaysia and Thailand,
the Web site said. Based on that schedule, the liner was headed from
Egypt to Oman when it was attacked.

The liner arrived in the southern Oman port city of Salalah on Monday
morning, and the passengers toured the city before leaving for the
capital, Muscat, Monday evening, an official of the Oman Tourism
Ministry said Tuesday. The official spoke on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

The head of a shipping agency branch in Salalah had contact with the
liner there.

"They talked about pirates opening fire at their ship off the Somalian
shores," Khalil Shaker told The Associated Press by telephone. He said
he had no details of the incident.

It is not the first time a cruise liner has been attacked. In 2005,
pirates opened fire on the Seabourn Spirit about 100 miles (160
kilometers) off the Somali coast. The faster cruise ship managed to
escape, and used a long-range acoustic device - which blasts a painful
wave of sound - to distract the pirates.

The International Maritime Bureau, in London, cited only the 2005
liner attack and a raid on the luxury yacht Le Ponant earlier this
year as attacks on passenger vessels off Somalia.

International warships patrol the area and have created a security
corridor in the region under a U.S.-led initiative, but the attacks
have not abated.

In about 100 attacks on ships off the Somali coast this year, 40
vessels have been hijacked, Choong said. Fourteen remain in the hands
of pirates along with more than 250 crew members.

In two if the most daring attacks, pirates seized a Ukrainian
freighter loaded with 33 battle tanks in September, and on Nov. 15, a
Saudi oil tanker carrying $100 million worth of crude oil.

Ukraine's Foreign Ministry spokesman Vasyl Kyrylych said Monday that
negotiations with Somali pirates holding the cargo ship MV Faina are
nearly completed, the Interfax news agency reported.

A spokesman for the Faina's owner said Sunday that the Somali pirates
had agreed on a ransom for the ship and it could be released within
days.

Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991, and pirates
have taken advantage of the country's lawlessness to launch attacks on
foreign shipping from the Somali coast. Around 100 ships have been
attacked so far this year.

Somali prime minister Nur Hassan Hussein said Tuesday that his country
has been torn apart by 18 years of civil war and cannot stop piracy
alone.

"This needs a tremendous effort," Hussein told The Associated Press.
He has appealed for international troops, as his government's
Ethiopian allies have said they would pull out their forces by the end
of the year.

Ethiopia, the region's military powerhouse, has been integral in
boosting the government. But Islamic insurgents have now seized
control of all of southern Somalia except for the capital and the
parliamentary seat of Baidoa.

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