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Kenya jails 24 Somalis for attacking an Iranian ship

MOMBASA: A Kenyan court sentenced 24 Somalis to seven years each in prison on  Thursday for attempting to hijack an Iranian merchant vessel, FV Ariya, in the  Gulf of Oman  in October 2010.

The men, who were arrested by the Dutch navy working under NATO  command, were handed over to Kenyan  authorities because Somalia, which is struggling to rebuild after two decades of  civil war, was not seen as stable enough to try them properly.

Although the number of hijackings has fallen markedly since 2011 due to  tighter security aboard ships and increased Western naval patrols, piracy  emanating from the Horn of Africa nation may still cost the world economy about  $18 billion a year, the World Bank  said in 2013.

Kenya  is one of a few countries that are  prosecuting pirates, alongside Seychelles  and Mauritius. But the cases are  difficult to prosecute and take a long time to complete.

Presiding magistrate Richard Odenyo  said in his ruling that there was  enough evidence to prove that the 24 men attacked the ship armed with AK-47  rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, rocket  launchers and other crude weapons.

“The accused used violence and offensive weapons against the crew, and put  the lives of the crew in danger,” he said, as a translator relayed the ruling in  Somali language.

The court also ordered the accused to be repatriated to Somalia  when they had finished serving their  sentence.

Jared Magolo, the lawyer representing the suspects, said the sentence was too  harsh and he would seek his clients’ consent to appeal.

“Neither the ship owners nor the crew testified in this case, so who is  complaining?” he asked reporters.

The 24 suspects, one of whom appeared in the dock on crutches after his leg  was amputated, had been held in custody at one of Kenya’s high security prisons  since their arrest.

More than 20 other Somalis were jailed in  Kenya last year for similar  offences in different trials.

The European Naval Force  for  Somalia has said it arrested  five suspected pirates last weekend who had unsuccessfully tried to hijack an  oil tanker in the Gulf of Aden.

dailystar.com

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