Pirates take 3 ships in 1 day off Somalia

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Armed pirates hijacked three ships off the coast of Somalia in a series of attacks Thursday, an international maritime body said, as it urged the U.N. to restore law and order to the notorious African waters.

Three hijackings in a day “is unheard of,” said Noel Choong, the head of the Kuala Lumpur-based piracy center of the International Maritime Bureau.

The attacks came two days after the seizure of a Malaysian palm oil tanker with 39 crew in the same area and raised to seven the number of ships hijacked in the Gulf of Aden since July 20.

In the first incident Thursday, pirates “continuously fired” on an Iranian bulk carrier before boarding and commandeering it, Choong said. Less than an hour later, a Japanese-operated tanker with 19 crew was attacked and seized near the same location, he said.

Later in the day, a German-operated cargo ship, flying the Antigua and Barbuda flag, was hijacked in the vicinity, he said.

He said the piracy center in Kuala Lumpur received a distress call about the German hijacking from a passing ship.

He said “the situation is getting very dangerous” in the waters off Somalia, the world’s piracy hotspot where 24 attacks were reported in the first half of this year.

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