Somali pirates free Japanese ship for ransom

Somali pirates freed a Japanese chemical tanker and its 25-man crew today after a €1

Somali pirates freed a Japanese chemical tanker and its 25-man crew today after a €1.2 million ransom was paid, a regional government official said.

The MT Irenewas seized by gunmen on August 21st as it travelled to India from France through the Gulf of Aden.

Somali gunmen have seized at least 30 vessels this year and attacked many more in the world's busiest and most dangerous shipping area connecting Europe to Asia and the Middle East.

"The pirates disembarked and the ship sailed away. Its 25 crew members are safe," said Abdulqadir Muse Yusuf, assistant fisheries minister for Somalia's northern region of Puntland.

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In the highest profile incident in years, Somali gunmen are holding a Ukrainian ship loaded with tanks and other weaponry.

Yesterday, an onshore associate of the pirates said a €6 million ransom deal was in the offing that might allow that ship to be freed within days.

The MV Fainahas been held since the end of September with 20 crew on board. Its cargo includes 33 T-72 tanks which were en route to Kenya's Mombasa port.

Earlier this week, the UN Security Council again called for a joint naval operation against the pirates, who have reaped millions in ransoms this year and pushed up insurance costs.

Somalia has been mired in anarchy since warlords overthrew a dictator in 1991.