Saturday March 30, 2024
FILE - This photograph shared by the Indian navy on the X platform shows the hijacked ship MV Ruen on March 16, 2024. The Indian navy rescued 19 crew members from the ship, then, on March 29, intercepted a fishing vessel in the Arabian Sea after a suspected hijacking.
NEW DELHI — India's navy said Friday it intercepted a fishing vessel in the Arabian Sea after a suspected hijacking, its latest anti-piracy operation after a spate of regional attacks on shipping.
Two Indian vessels had approached the Iranian-flagged FV Al Kamar 786 around 165 kilometers (103 miles) southwest of the Yemeni island of Socotra, not far from the eastern tip of Somalia.
An operation was "currently underway by the Indian Navy towards rescue of hijacked FV & its crew," the navy said in a statement posted on X, formerly Twitter.
The statement added that nine armed pirates were believed to have taken over the vessel. It did not say how many crew members were aboard.
India's navy has been deployed continuously off Somalia since 2008.
It stepped up anti-piracy efforts last year following a surge in maritime assaults, including in the Arabian Sea and by Yemen's Iran-backed Houthi rebels in the Red Sea.
This month, the Indian navy rescued 19 crew members off the Maltese-flagged cargo ship MV Ruen, which had been hijacked by Somali pirates in December.
On Saturday, it brought 35 Somali nationals accused of the hijacking to Mumbai aboard the warship INS Kolkata, which had led the rescue operation, to face a piracy trial in an Indian court.