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It is not an easy job being a pirate.

Phil1

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Mar 3, 2009
465
7
Minot N.D.
I made £1.5 million from ransoms in 2010
Thu, Mar 10 2011

By Abdiqani Hassan

BOSASSO, Somalia (Reuters) - Only two years after deciding to join in the piracy rampant off the Somalian coast, Saeed Yare is a dollar multi-millionaire.

Leaning against the door of his luxury Toyota Landcruiser, one of the latest models in the seaside town of Bosasso, the Yare puffs on a cigarette.

"It is not an easy job being a pirate. You gamble with your life, but I enjoy being a piracy tycoon," says the slim 27-year-old, dressed in a sharp suit he says is Italian.

"The piracy business is like a presidential seat, you don't want to give it up once you taste its sweetness. A friend of mine died in the recent navy operation -- but he left one million dollars!" Yare said, referring to a botched rescue attempt that left four U.S. citizens dead.

Yare said he made $2.4 million (1.5 million pounds) in 2010: $1.2 million for investing in the venture that led to the hijacking of the British-flagged Asian Glory, another $700,000 for Saudi tanker Al Nisr Al Saudi and $500,000 for Bulgarian vessel Panega.

"I earned more cash after investing in two operations and personally participating in a separate hijacking, all were successful," he said.

"I spent some of the cash on weapons, private bodyguards, luxury cars, trucks, a boat and three villas. And I still have enough to use until another ship is hijacked."

Armed pirate gangs have made millions of dollars striking at ships in the vast expanse of the Indian Ocean, as far south as the Seychelles islands and eastwards towards India.

Yare abandoned a lucrative trade in khat, a sure-fire route to amassing riches in the Horn of Africa country, when he saw former fishermen getting even richer by piracy.

He befriended a pirate who advised him to "invest" $80,000 to help carry out a hijacking and expect a 50 percent return of $120,000 once ransom was paid.

"I got inspired to be a pure pirate in 2009. First, I set off into the sea with them and captured a Saudi oil tanker that made us lick our fingers -- a hell of a lot of cash!"

FLASHY LIFESTYLE

Yare was thrust into his father's trade of fishing at the age of nine and was expected to contribute to the family's income by the time he became a teenager.

He took up selling khat after saving enough to import a batch of the stimulant from neighbouring Kenya.

But even returns as high as 300 percent from selling the mild narcotic were not enough for the ambitious young man. He turned to piracy to fuel a flashy lifestyle.

The gangs have an agreed formula for splitting their loot -- hijackers receive 50 percent, investors get 35 percent, and guards on the ship get the remaining 15 percent.

Yare said the pirates' objective was purely money, not to torture or kill their hostages. The shooting of four Americans when special forces tried to rescue them was because those holding them were pushed to the wall, he said.

However, Yare issued a chilling warning for crews of any South Korean and Russian ships that are captured.

South Korea's navy rescued a South Korean chemical ship hijacked by Somali buccaneers in the Arabian Sea, capturing five pirates and killing eight.

In a separate incident, Russian forces cut 10 pirates adrift without navigation equipment or much hope of survival after they stormed a tanker the gang was holding.

"The South Korean and Russian rescue operations did not affect us, but ... we must take revenge," Yare said. "We shall be killing Russian and South Korean crew until their navies stop attacks against us."

The bandits' wealth has pushed up the cost of living in coastal pirate towns such as Garad, Hobyo and Hardheere, but the gangs are philanthropic to the less fortunate, Yare said.

"We give residents $200,000 whenever a ship is freed to enable them cope with the changing life. This amount goes to them through local officials such as clan elders."

Pirate gangs elsewhere are forced to share ransoms with al Shabaab Islamist rebels, al Qaeda's proxies in east Africa.

"Colleagues in other towns give cash to Islamists in order to continue their business," he said. "Al Shabaab is just another pirate group, Islamists are parasites."

(Writing by Abdi Sheikh; editing by Helen Nyambura-Mwaura)
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/03/10/uk-somalia-piracy-idUKTRE7292TH20110310
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

I served in Somalia, and I can say that I sure hope starvation returns to that shitass country.

Again....
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

Place me on one of those ships with one of my rifles and I'll end his income, life style and some of his friends. I'll do it just for a free cruise.
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: beck.jamie</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I don't know about the South Koreans. However, if they kill Russians God help them.

Jamie </div></div>

That seems to be something called "deterrent". Unfortunately, we seem to have forgotten the meaning of the word.
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

The cockiness is maddening. Having been on counter-piracy ops off of Somalia before, I can say that worldwide policy is garbage. If high seas justice was dispensed as it should be we wouldn't have to worry about the lucrative nature of this business. That dude is just another douchebag that continues to profit because many nations' policies are pussified.

Josh
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

Screw with the russians and they will wipe out your family tree.
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: MinorDamage</div><div class="ubbcode-body">The cockiness is maddening. Having been on counter-piracy ops off of Somalia before, I can say that worldwide policy is garbage. If high seas justice was dispensed as it should be we wouldn't have to worry about the lucrative nature of this business. That dude is just another douchebag that continues to profit because many nations' policies are pussified.

Josh</div></div>

+1
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

Play with fire long enough your bound to get burned.
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

Some one tell me why we caint have an " Armed Suprise" for these little basterds. Doesn't a ship have a right to defend itself by any means possible?
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

Indian navy captures 61 Somalian pirates and stolen 'mother ship' after deadly gun battle

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 10:47 AM on 14th March 2011

The Indian navy captured 61 pirates who jumped into the Arabian Sea to flee a gunfight and a fire on their hijacked ship.

The pirates had hijacked the Mozambique-flagged Vega 5 in December and had been using it as a mother ship - a base from which they staged several attacks between east Africa and India.

A patrol aircraft spotted the vessel on Friday while responding to reports of a pirate attack.
Captured: 61 pirates are held on board an Indian Navy ship after they were intercepted in the Arabian Sea

When the Indian ships closed in last night, the pirates opened fire and tried to escape in the Vega 5.

But their vessel caught fire when the Indian navy returned fire.

Pirates jumped into the sea from the burning vessel, but were captured by Indian sailors.

All 13 crew from the fishing boat the pirates were attacking were also rescued nearly 700 miles off Kochi in southern India.

The pirates were carrying around 90 small arms or rifles and some heavier weapons, including rocket-propelled grenades, a navy statement said.

It is unclear if the pirates were from Somalia or Yemen. They were being taken to Mumbai, India's financing capital, to be prosecuted for attacking the Indian ships.
Gun battle: A patrol aircraft spotted the pirates' mother ship the Vega 5 and Indian Navy vessels then gave chase

Seized: Mozambique-flagged Vega 5 was hijacked by pirates in December and was being used as a base to carry out more shipping raids

Piracy has plagued the shipping industry off the east Africa coast for years, but violence and ransom demands have escalated in recent months.

A total of 30 ships and more than 660 hostages have been taken as of February.

They included British couple Paul and Rachel Chandler, who were freed last year after being held captive for 13 months.

It comes as the owner of a Bangladeshi-flagged ship that was held for more than three months said the vessel and 26 crew members were released today.

Mehrul Kabir declined to say whether any ransom was paid for the release of the M.V. Jahan Moni, which was seized off the Indian coast while transporting nickel ore, but reports said pirates were paid $4.2million.

The Indian navy's third anti-piracy operation this year followed the capture of 28 Somali pirates last month and another 15 in January. Both groups also are to be prosecuted in Mumbai.

Indian warships have been escorting merchant ships as part of international anti-piracy surveillance in the area since 2008.

Several nations, including the U.S., are prosecuting pirate suspects their militaries captured but other suspects have been released as countries weigh legal issues and other factors.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-...un-battle.html#

and

Somali pirates cut ransoms to clear hijacked ships
Sun, Mar 13 2011

By Mohamed Ahmed and Abdi sheikh

MOGADISHU (Reuters) - Somali pirates said on Sunday they would lower some of their ransom demands to get a faster turnover of ships they hijack in the Indian Ocean.

Armed pirate gangs, who have made millions of dollars capturing ships as far south as the Seychelles and eastwards towards India, said they were holding too many vessels and needed a quicker handover to generate more income.

"I believe there is no excuse for taking high ransoms. At least each of our groups holds ships now," pirate Hussein told Reuters from Hobyo on the Somalian coast. He said the pirates were holding more than 30 ships at the moment.

"We have lowered the ransom only for the ships we have used to hijack other ships. We sometimes release these ships free of charge for they generate more (money). But we shall not lower the ransom for the bulk ships we are sure can bring bulk money."

Using captured merchant vessels as launchpads for new hijackings, the pirates have grown bolder despite a loosely coordinated global response, and insurance premiums for shipping lines have rocketed.

Pirates hold seized ships for an average of up to 150 days before freeing them for ransoms, some as high as $9.5 million for the release of Samho Dream, a South Korean oil supertanker.

Abdullahi, another pirate, said any decrease in ransom would be calculated by the ship's value, its cargo and the length of time it had been held.

"We have changed our previous strategies. We have altered our operations and ransom deals with modern business deals," he said from the port town of Haradhere.

"We want to free ships within a short period of time instead of keeping them for a long time and incurring more expenses in guarding them. We have to free them at a lower ransom so that we can hijack more ships."

Attacks have grown since 2007 when young Somalis in small skiffs with AK-47s and rocket propelled grenades took to the water is to seek their fortunes.

But since late February, the pirates have had to share their spoils with the Al Shabaab Islamist rebels, who profess loyalty to al Qaeda. The insurgents -- who have been waging a four-year insurrection against the country's Western-backed government -- struck a deal to get a 20 percent cut of ransoms in Haradhere.

Pirates said the rebels had no say in their plan.

"Al Shabaab has nothing to do with our plan to lower ransoms. We agreed on a fixed 20 percent cut. Low or high ransom, the agreement is fixed," said Abdullahi.

http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/03/13/idINIndia-55543620110313
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

If these guys start killing russian citizens out of vengance like they say, our problems with them may end quite a bit quicker.
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

This could be a very promising cash cow for a contracting company that would work for all countries involved. Let's just say that each pirate has "x" bounty on his head paid by the "x" countries that are being terrorized. Multiply the heads times the countries and .......... You get my point?
International waters....legalities...... I don't see a problem???? Do you?
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: MinorDamage</div><div class="ubbcode-body">The cockiness is maddening. Having been on counter-piracy ops off of Somalia before, I can say that worldwide policy is garbage. If high seas justice was dispensed as it should be we wouldn't have to worry about the lucrative nature of this business. That dude is just another douchebag that continues to profit because many nations' policies are pussified.

Josh </div></div>

Well said, pirates should be shot on sight, end of story
 
Re: It is not an easy job being a pirate.

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: mexican match</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Screw with the russians and they will wipe out your family tree. </div></div>

^^^^THIS