Crew regain control of hijacked ship off Somalia
By Daniel Wallis and Edward McAllister
NAIROBI/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The crew of a U.S.-flagged, Danish-owned freighter hijacked by pirates off Somalia retook control of the ship on Wednesday but their captain was still being held hostage on a lifeboat, the shipping line and a crew member said.
The crew of 20 Americans were in control of the ship and were trying to negotiate their captain's release while they waited for a U.S. warship to arrive, second mate Ken Quinn told CNN.
"We are just trying to offer them whatever we can, food, but it is not working too good," Quinn told CNN. He said the four pirates were holding the captain hostage on the ship's lifeboat.
"We have a coalition warship that will be here in three hours. We are just trying to hold them off for three more hours and then we will have a warship here to help us," he said.
The ship's operator, Maersk Line Ltd, confirmed that the U.S. crew had regained control of the 17,000-tonne Maersk Alabama after the pirates left the ship with one hostage.
A spokesman for the company said no injuries had been reported for the rest of the crew left aboard.
Maritime officials said the Maersk Alabama was carrying food aid for Somalia and Uganda to from Djibouti to Mombasa, a Kenyan port, when it was seized far out in the Indian Ocean.
The seizure was the latest in an escalation in pirate attacks off the lawless Horn of Africa country of Somalia. Continued...



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