India Sends Warship To Hijacked Freighter | TR Daily News

India Sends Warship To Hijacked Freighter | TR Daily News

A freighter carrying an Indian crew was hijacked off the coast of Somalia within the Arabian Sea. The Indian Navy mentioned it had began monitoring after a misery name and was carefully monitoring the scenario. The destroyer INS Chennai is approaching the MV Lila Norfolk to supply help, the Navy continued.

According to reviews from the Indian news company ANI, there are no less than 15 Indian crew members on board the Liberian-flagged “MV Lila Norfolk”.

Crew ought to be unhurt

The Navy didn’t say whether or not the cargo ship was at the moment within the arms of hijackers. However, the Navy said {that a} patrol flight had ensured that the crew was protected.

The British Maritime Observatory mentioned on Thursday that 5 to 6 armed folks had boarded the ship about 460 nautical miles east of the Somali city of Eyl.

According to the captain, the crew barricaded themselves within the ship’s citadel.

It was solely on the finish of December that India introduced the deployment of three warships and a reconnaissance plane to the Arabian Sea after a collection of assaults on service provider ships.

The coast off Somalia is a hotbed of piracy

The coast off the disaster state of Somalia was a hotspot for pirate assaults a couple of years in the past. As a results of the EU mission “Atalanta”, which has been operating since 2008 to fight piracy there, assaults have decreased considerably.

According to the IMB Piracy Reporting Center, there was one other assault on December 14th wherein a freighter was hijacked and pushed to Somalia.

Somalia is positioned within the Horn of Africa on the opposite aspect of the Gulf of Aden from Yemen. Since the outbreak of the Gaza battle, the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen have repeatedly attacked ships within the Red Sea to stop them from passing by to Israel.

The Red Sea is taken into account some of the essential delivery routes for world commerce as a result of it connects the Mediterranean with the Indian Ocean through the Suez Canal in Egypt. Many delivery firms are at the moment rerouting their ships and avoiding the Red Sea.

Source: www.nationalturk.com