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Pirates free Italian tugboat crew

Other News Materials 10 August 2009 05:06 (UTC +04:00)
Pirates free Italian tugboat crew

The crew of an Italian tugboat held for four months by Somali pirates have been freed, Italy's foreign minister says, according to BBC.

Franco Frattini said no ransom money had been paid, and that the release was the result of collaboration between the Italian and Somali authorities.

The 75m (250ft) tugboat with its crew of 10 Italians, five Romanians and one Croat was towing two barges when it was seized in the Gulf of Aden in April.

It is now on its way to Djibouti, accompanied by naval vessels.

Mr Frattini expressed his satisfaction at the positive resolution of the affair and the release of the Italian citizens on board.

Their release was the result of a long process involving contact with the Somali government, the collaboration of the authorities in the semi-autonomous Puntland region, and the work of the Italian intelligence services, he said.

Somalia's UN-backed government is battling Islamist insurgents and only controls a small part of the country.

It has not had an effective central government since 1991 and the lack of law and order has led to the dramatic rise in piracy in one of the world's busiest shipping lanes in recent years.

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