NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL VERSION WITH TRANSLATION

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

NewsWatch

Somali Official Vows to Rescue Supertanker 'By Force'

The pirates who seized a Saudi oil supertanker in a brazen hijacking dropped anchor near a Somalia fishing village as a Somali official vowed to rescue the vessel and "use force if necessary."

The ship anchored near the impoverished village of Harardhere, a pirate stronghold some 265 miles by land from Eyl, where the U.S. Navy believes the ship is heading.

Abdullkadir Musa, the deputy sea port minister in northern Somalia's Puntland region, said that his forces would rescue the ship if it anchored anywhere near Eyl. Musa's comments came as the Somali pirates who hijacked the tanker over the weekend have begun to negotiate with the vessel's owners and have taken the ship toward Eyl, the U.S. Navy said Tuesday.

The Saudi-owned Sirius Star, which was carrying two million barrels of oil valued at $100 million was captured with its multi-national crew, including two Britons, 450 miles off the coast of Kenya on Sunday. The owners of the ship, which was hijacked over the weekend and is believed to contain about $100 million in oil, grappled with how to respond Tuesday, as naval forces patrolling the region said they would not intervene to stop or free the captured vessel.

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal called the hijacking "an outrageous act" and said "piracy, like terrorism, is a disease which is against everybody, and everybody must address it together."

Speaking during a visit to Athens on Tuesday, he said Saudi Arabia would join an international initiative against piracy in the Red Sea area, where more than 80 pirate attacks have taken place this year. He did not elaborate on what steps the kingdom would take to better protect its vital oil tankers. Saudi Arabia's French-equipped navy has 18,000-20,000 personnel, but has never taken part in any high-seas fighting.

"All 25 crew members are reported to be safe and the vessel is fully laden," said a spokesman, adding that a response team was established to ensure the safe release of the ship and its crew.

It remains under the control of pirates, a spokeswoman for the Bahrain-based U.S. Fifth Fleet said. However crew members are "remaining safe", according to the ship's operating company Vela International.

The 318,000 ton tanker, three times the size of an aircraft carrier, is not only the largest ship yet to be hijacked by increasingly audacious pirates, but the furthest out to sea than any previous attacks.

Adm. Michael Mullen, the U.S.' top military officer in the region said he was "stunned" by the reach of the Somali pirates.

"I'm stunned by the range of it, less so than I am the size," said Mullen. The pirates are "very good at what they do. They're very well armed. Tactically, they are very good," he said.

Its capture raises fears that international patrols nearer the coast and in the Gulf of Aden will not be enough to protect vital trade routes as pirate gangs become ever more audacious. Sirius Star, which is owned by Saudi giant oil company Aramco, carried 25 crew members from Croatia, Britain, Philippines, Poland and Saudi Arabia, according to a U.S. Navy statement.

The South Korea-built ship, launched earlier this year, is registered in Liberia. NATO said Tuesday it had no immediate plans to intercept the hijacked Saudi supertanker.

Two vessels - the Greek frigate HS Themistokles and the Italian destroyer ITS Durand - are escorting cargo ships chartered by the World Food Program to carry food aid from Mombasa to Mogadishu. The British frigate HMS Cumberland is conducting deterrence patrols in the Gulf of Aden, where it was engaged in a firefight last week with pirates attempting to hijack a Danish ship.

The vessels have been dispatched to the region under a U.N. mandate to escort vessels chartered by the World Food Program to Somali ports, and to conduct patrols designed to deter pirates from attacking merchant ships transiting through the Gulf of Aden.

"NATO's mandate is not related to interception of hijacked ships outside the patrol area," Appathurai said. "I'm not aware that there's any intention by NATO to try and intercept this ship."

Aruba Police: New Evidence in Natalee Holloway Case
A new witness in case of the 2005 disappearance of American teenager Natalee Holloway has brought a Dutch college student back into the spotlight as a prime suspect, but prosecutors in Aruba say they haven't yet gathered enough evidence to crack the case.

The Prosecutors' Office says the new witness claims the only suspect in the case confessed to her that he was involved in dumping Holloway's body at sea. But prosecutor Hans Mos said Tuesday that more evidence is needed to build a case against Dutch college student Joran van der Sloot.

Mos further said that wire reports about the new evidence were "much ado about nothing," since the new witness couldn't provide definitive evidence. And Mos noted that Van der Sloot already has given many different stories about what happened.

Investigators reopened the case earlier this year based on similar admissions caught in hidden-camera recordings by a Dutch TV crime show. But in February, judges rejected an attempt to arrest Van der Sloot for a third time in Holloway's disappearance. He had been released due to insufficient evidence the first two times he was arrested.

Aruban prosecutors had sought to detain him based on hidden-camera recordings in which Van der Sloot said Holloway collapsed on the beach after they left the bar. He then called a friend to dump her body at sea, according to the video shot by reporter Peter De Vries.

Van der Sloot's attorney, Joseph Tacopina, said in February that his client was not responsible for the Holloway's death and that the tapes did not amount to a confession.

"There was no confession, no admission of a crime by Joran on any of these tapes, which is very telling," Tacopina said on ABC's "Good Morning America."

Holloway, 18, of Mountain Brook, Alabama, was last seen in May 2005 leaving a bar with Van der Sloot on the final night of a high school graduation trip to the Dutch Caribbean island. She attended junior high in Clinton, Miss., and her father still lives in Meridian.

Missing Wis. Mom Found Dead, Ex-Husband Arrested

Murder charges are expected this week in the death of a Hatfield woman who had been missing since Nov. 7. Authorities in Jackson County say 27-year-old Alisha Sidie's body was found late Saturday and her former husband has been arrested in her death.

The Jackson County Sheriff's Department said Sidie's body was recovered in a wooded area in the town of Komensky. Jackson County Sheriff Duane Waldera said Sunday that someone stepped forward with information that led investigators to interview Sidie's ex-husband again.

Waldera says Sidie's ex-husband is cooperating with authorities and that he showed investigators the general area where her body would be found. Investigators told station WEAU in Eau Claire that the couple's 2-year-old twin boys were in state custody.

Cops: Girl in 'Cinderella' Situation Raped, Beaten by Aunt

A Worcester, Mass., woman has been charged with raping and beating her teenage niece in a shocking abuse case that police are calling a "Cinderella-type situation."

The victim, who is now 16, was allegedly beaten with thorny rose stems, assaulted with frozen hot dogs, slammed to the floor and kicked and punched in the eye numerous times starting in 2005 while living at her aunt's home, The Boston Herald reported, citing court documents.

The aunt, 35-year-old Mara Escobar was ordered held on $25,000 bail after pleading not guilty at her arraignment Monday to multiple charges, including assault and battery on a child, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and rape of a child with force, The Herald reported.

Police Sgt. Kerry Hazelhurst said the 16-year-old girl was forced to do housework and live in a sparsely furnished room while Escobar's two daughters had TVs, DVD players, video games and toys in their rooms.

MICHELLE

FOX News, London Times, AP, WEAU, The Boston Herald.

No comments: