This a listing on my felings about my treks in the mountains and the kind of people who I have met there. The experience is a very spiritual one and it has been great going up into the mountains again and again... The Sunrises and Sun sets are breath taking!

Monday, December 15, 2008

NAVY AT SEA OVER WHAT TO DO WITH PIRATES

W ith no instructions from the Indian government, navy ship INS Mysore is at sea over what to do with the 23 pirates and their dhow apprehended by it in the Gulf of Aden while repulsing an attack by the brigands on an Ethiopian merchant vessel.

"Since Saturday afternoon, the 12 Somali and 11 Yemeni pirates are kept in custody on board INS Mysore and they are being fed with the rations meant for sailors," Navy officials said here today. "We have not received any instructions yet from the Defence Ministry or the External Affairs Ministry on what needs to be done with the pirates," they said.

The piquant situation that INS Mysore finds itself has been compounded as the Rules of Engagement issued to the warship before it set sail to Gulf of Aden on anti-piracy patrol duties is unclear on the course of action if it did seize a pirate vessel and sea brigands, officials said.

However, officials claimed that frantic efforts were being made by both ministries to get a foreign port to accept the bandits for trial in their courts and they were optimistic of finding a solution by tomorrow. The only other option available to INS Mysore is to abandon its anti-piracy patrols and return to an Indian port to hand over the pirates to local authorities for trying them. But that appears to be unacceptable to the Navy authorities as their action against the sea bandits was just gaining momentum.

Officials said under the United Nations Convention on Laws of the Seas (UNCLOS), International Maritime Organisation resolutions and the Navy Act and Regulations, the warships were authorised to seize and apprehend the pirates. UNCLOS Articles 100, 105, 107 and 110 provided for warships to act against pirates in the high seas or any other place outside the jurisdiction of any nation state, including boarding, inspecting, seizing vessels and its equipment, and arrest the bandits.

"Article 105 specifically provided for the courts of the country, which carried out the seizure, to decide upon the penalties to be imposed and also determine the action to be taken with regard to the pirates ships and their property," of ficials said.