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Foiled Pirate Attack

nda/dpa/afpMarch 4, 2009

The German navy detained nine people Tuesday following a dramatic action to head off a pirate attack on a German merchant vessel off the coast of Somalia.

https://p.dw.com/p/H5Di
German marines serving with the EU's Atalanta anti-piracy mission off Somalia
German marines, backed by US forces, responded to the attack on the MV CourierImage: picture-alliance/ dpa

The frigate Rheinland-Pfalz received a distress call early Tuesday from the German-owned ship saying she was under fire from pirates armed with bazookas and machine guns, a statement said.

A tricky deliberation process has started in Germany, which has to decide how to legally proceed with the pirates.

This is the first time in the history of modern Germany's navy that anyone has been apprehended at sea.

According to German Defense Ministry in Berlin, a vessel owned by a Bremen-based shipping company, the MV Courier, was attacked by pirates during early morning Tuesday.

The ministry said that the pirates were armed with anti-tank rocket launchers and firearms.

US Navy helicopters thwarted the attack with the help of marines from the Rheinland-Pfalz a short time later, seizing the pirate's boat and arresting nine people, the Defense Ministry said.

"(The pirates) are currently being questioned about who they are and their activities," the German military said, adding they had 48 hours to interrogate the pirates.

Some of the pirates were from Sudan, the Defense Ministry added.

The German sailors encountered a sizeable weapons stash, which they threw overboard for security reasons, according to Defense Minister Franz Josef Jung.

A question of procedure

Suspected Somali pirates appear in court in Mombasa
Pirates which have been caught often go on trial in AfricaImage: AP

Germany must now decide how to proceed with the men, and whether to try them in Germany or hand them over to another country. Basic medical checks were carried out on them, on board the Rheinland- Pfalz.

Now it needs to be established whether German interests are at stake, in which case the country's legal system can swing into action.

A specially convened commission, including the Interior, Foreign, Defense and Justice Ministries, is expected to decide Wednesday whether to proceed under German law.

If this is the case, the pirates would initially be taken to Djibouti, where the European Union's anti-pirate mission is based. From there, German federal police agents would collect the men and transfer them to Hamburg.

The legal status is further complicated by the fact that the ship, although registered in the German city of Bremen, was sailing under an Antiguan flag.

The German navy joined the EU's anti-pirate mission Atalanta at the end of 2008 with what Jung described then as a "robust mandate."

International force reducing the numbers of attacks

German marines from the frigate Karlsruhe
The presence of international troops has cut the number of attacksImage: picture-alliance/ dpa

In 2008, pirates seized more than 200 ships off the Somali coast and in the Gulf of Aden, which is now patrolled by naval warships from the United States, EU and other countries including China, demanding millions of dollars in ransom.

In November, pirates captured the world's attention when they hijacked the Saudi-owned super-tanker Sirius Star, carrying two million barrels of crude oil, and demanded a 25-million-dollar (19.9 million-euro) ransom for the ship and its crew.

The pirates, heavily armed and using high-powered speedboats, prey on the key maritime route leading to the Suez Canal, through which an estimated 30 percent of the world's oil transits.

They are believed to number around 1,200 former and seasonal fishermen and coast guards, many of them from lawless Somalia, which has been ravaged by years of conflict and starvation.

However, the number of pirate attacks has been sharply reduced this year following the sending of more ships to the area, including from the European Union's anti-piracy operation Atalanta in mid-December.