Three Somali pirates were shot dead in an apparent argument
with their mates aboard a hijacked Ukrainian cargo ship carrying tanks, the
Itar-Tass news agency reported on Tuesday.
None of the 20 crew being held hostage on the freighter Faina were injured in
the exchange of fire stemming from a alleged dispute between the pirates,
according to a Moskovskiy Bulletin news report.
The cargo ship remained anchored near the island of Hobyo
off the Somali coast. There was no damage reported to the vessel's cargo,
including depleted uranium anti-tank shells, armoured personnel carriers, and
33 T-72 tanks.
Three US Navy warships were on the scene and US helicopters were over flying
the Belize-registered Faina. The USS Howard, a minesweeper, was leading the
monitoring operation.
The US
destroyer USS Howard and the Russian frigate Neustrashniy were en route as
reinforcements, according to news reports.
The pirates have demanded a ransom of 20 million dollars to release the cargo
ship and its crew.
US naval officials on Monday said the tanks and ammunition had been destined
for an as-yet unnamed group in South Sudan. An
un-determined number of armored personnel carriers also is aboard, according to
Ukrainian media reports.
Ukrainian government officials have said the shipment was a legitimate
state-to-state arms delivery from Ukraine
to Kenya.
Tomax Team Inc, an Odessa-based shipping company, is the Faina's operator.
Seventeen Ukrainians, two Russians, and one Lativian national were known to be
held hostage aboard the Faina. A third Russian, the ship's former captain
Vladimir Kolobkov, died on Sunday from a stroke, Ukraine's Channel 5 television
reported.
A pirate spokesman said any international attempt at military action to free
the hostages would result in their death.
"If any warships attack, nobody on the ship will live: either we will all
survive or we will all die," Sugale Ali, a pirate spokesman, told Deutsche
Presse-Agentur dpa by satellite phone on Monday.
Piracy is rife in the Gulf of Aden - a strategic shipping route off Somalia - with
over a dozen ships currently in the hands of armed groups, the latest victim
being a Greek vessel seized Saturday.
Two other pirated vessels, MV Capt Stefanos and MV Centauri, are also anchored
in the same location as the Ukrainian ship, the US Navy said.
However, pirates have over the past few days released two ships - Japanese
vessel the MV Stella Maris and Malaysian tanker the MT Bunga Melati 5 -
although ransoms of several million dollars are believed to have been paid.
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