Signal, No Noise

October 29, 2009

Israel Drones To Be Used By Germany In Afghanistan

Filed under: Europe,Germany,Israel,Middle East,Military,Western Europe — mungurk @ 20:49

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(AP) JERUSALEM (AP) – Israel Aerospace Industries said Wednesday it would supply unmanned spy planes to Germany that will see action in Afghanistan early next year.

The Heron drones will be deployed by the German air force in northern Afghanistan in early 2010 for reconnaissance missions, the company said in a statement.

It would not reveal how many drones were sold or for how much but said it was a multimillion dollar deal.

Germany’s Federal Office of Defense Technology and Procurement confirmed it had signed an agreement to purchase the aircraft.

Israeli drones have previously been supplied to coalition forces to gather intelligence data on Islamic militants in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The Heron is Israel’s largest surveillance drone, with a 54-foot wingspan and an ability to fly for as long as 30 hours at a time at a speed of 140 mph (225.3 kph) and a height of 30,000 feet (9,144 meters).

Venezuela’s Soaring Murder Rate Blamed on Too Many Guns

Filed under: Americas,South America,Venezuela — mungurk @ 20:38

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By Paula Vilella

CARACAS – Venezuela could close out the year with more than 18,000 murders, a scourge that is increasing and the solution to which, in the opinion of analysts, includes the disarmament of the civilian population.

It is calculated that in this country there are between 9 million and 15 million weapons in the hands of the public, the president of the Institute for Investigations of Coexistence and Citizen Security, or INCOSEC, Pedro Rangel, told Efe in an interview, drawing his figures from data from a congressional committee.

The media has determined that the average Venezuelan household has three weapons, something that is “completely out of proportion” in Rangel’s judgment since “the possession of weapons on the part of the civilian population notably influences the violence in the streets.”

INCOSEC figures gathered in the Caracas metropolitan area during the first half of 2009 show that 98 percent of the murders were committed with firearms and 60 percent of the bodies had been hit by more than five bullets.

This shows “exacerbated levels of violence,” Rangel said, noting that 36 percent of the victims were males between the ages of 15 and 29.

The Venezuelan Violence Observatory forecasts that, if the current trend is maintained, there will be 18,436 murders committed nationwide by the end of the year, and this estimate is “conservative” given that the final months of the year are usually the most violent, according to Observatory director Robeto Briceño-Leon.

From 1994 to 1998, the murder rate per 100,000 residents fell from 22 to 20, placing Venezuela among the Latin American countries with a moderately high rate of violence.

However, Venezuela now has a very high rate in the region, with an average of 40 deaths per day and 52 murders per 100,000 residents at the end of 2008.

Last year, there were more than 12,000 violent deaths in a country of 28 million inhabitants.

Concern over violence in society is rising among the public, which says that crime is the main problem besetting the country, according to Datanalisis opinion surveys.

Eighty percent of those surveyed say they are dissatisfied or very dissatisfied with the Hugo Chavez administration’s response in the matter.

However, Datanalisis director Luis Vicente Leon told Efe that “the president does not seem to be perceived by the Venezuelan population as being responsible” for the problem.

“When you ask them who is responsible for inflation, unemployment or shortages, the government or the president always bears an important share, a concrete responsibility. However, the responsibility fragments in an amazing way” in the case of crime, he added.

Chavez does not speak about the matter much at all because “he doesn’t want to make it into one of his problems,” and besides the bulk of the population believes that the problem has no solution, he said.

“In the poor neighborhoods, it doesn’t matter if they kill 60 or 70 … in a weekend, they coexist with insecurity and they’ve done so for many years. Therefore, they don’t link it with Chavez but with poverty, with their circumstances,” Leon said.

At INCOSEC, Rangel disagrees with this analysis because – according to government figures – poverty levels have diminished significantly in Venezuela since Chavez took office in 1999.

In his judgment, the fact that 93 percent of crimes go unpunished constitutes “an invitation to the criminal and a blow to the pride of the law enforcement bodies.”

“We need a police model that is governed by transparency, equality and justice in the process of recruiting, supported by a system of social security and appropriate individual and collective equipment allocation,” Rangel said.

The steps that INCOSEC proposes following include pushing for the Weapons, Explosives and Munitions bill, activating a national disarmament plan and fostering changes in behavior in all sectors of society. EFE

Terrorism: Bin Laden ‘face’ appears in new video

Filed under: Terrorism — mungurk @ 20:33

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Rome, 28 October(AKI) – A new video clip which appeared on extremist websites on Wednesday has intrigued analysts as it appears to show the face of Al-Qaeda’s elusive leader Osama Bin Laden. The clip contains a sermon given on 20 September by one of Al-Qaeda’s leaders, Libyan-born Abu Yahya al-Libi, to mark the end of the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

At the end of al-Libi’s sermon, the video images go into soft focus and the camera zooms in on a grainy image that looks like Bin Laden’s.

The video bears the hallmark of Al-Qaeda’s media arm As-Sahab, and shows a the face of a man with a long grey bear and a thin face, which appears for just a few seconds.

The most recent pictures available of Bin Laden, who is rumoured to be in poor health, date back to 2004. However, a number of audio messages have surfaced since which are purportedly from Bin Laden.

Yemen, Iran trade Accusations About Houthi Rebels

Filed under: Iran,Middle East,Terrorism,Yemen — mungurk @ 20:31

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By Elizabeth Arrott
Cairo
28 October 2009
Yemen

Yemen’s government has confirmed reports its coast guard has seized an Iranian ship with arms it says were destined for Yemeni rebels. Iranian media counters the Yemeni government is using al-Qaida in its war against the Shi’ite rebels.

Yemen’s Interior Ministry says it is questioning five Iranians found aboard a ship captured earlier this week off Yemen’s western coast.

Local officials said weapons aboard the ship were destined for al-Houthi rebels, Zaidi Shi’ite followers of the late Malik al-Houthi who claim they are discriminated against in the majority-Sunni nation.

The rebels and Iran deny any ties.

As for the ship, Tehran first dismissed reports as a media lie. It now says the government charges are baseless.

In addition, Iran’s PressTV broadcast reports accusing the Yemeni government of seeking outside help.

“A Yemeni official has reportedly met one of the top members of al-Qaida in Yemen,” said the Iranian television presenter. “The two sides reportedly agreed that Saanaa will provide al-Qaida forces with light weapons.”

Yemen’s government denies turning to al-Qaida in the fight against the rebels.

The conflict, which began in 2004 but picked up in earnest this August, brings together a trinity of regional problems – poverty, extremism and sectarian divides. Add to that the competing interests of rival regional powers, Sunni Saudi Arabia along Yemen’s northern border and Shi’ite Iran, plus the spectre of international terrorism, and Yemen’s problems gain a wider interest.

U.S. officials worry that al-Qaida members, driven from Afghanistan, are trying to set up camp in Yemen, ancestral home to network leader Osama bin Laden.

Yemen Post newspaper editor Hakim al-Masmari says the relationship between the government and al-Qaida has been murky in the past. But he says it is not at all clear there is any current partnership.

“Today, the government has no agreement with al-Qaida and their relationship is very fierce,” said Hakim al-Masmari. “That is why over the last six months, over 100 al-Qaida members have been imprisoned.”

Al-Masmari says that relations among the rebels are not even straightforward.

“They are people who are against the government due to certain issues, either because the government raided their houses during previous wars and that was the cause of family members being killed, so they are fighting along with the Houthi just to go against the government, not for love of Houthi himself,” he said.

Perhaps the clearest issue in this conflict is its victims. Aid groups say as many as 150,000 people have been displaced by the fighting, many of them seeking refuge in remote camps near the Saudi border.

Loosening of FBI Rules Stirs Privacy Concerns

Filed under: Africa,Americas,Eastern Africa,North America,Somalia,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 20:27

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Thursday, October 29, 2009
By CHARLIE SAVAGE, The New York Times

WASHINGTON — After a Somali-American teenager from Minneapolis committed a suicide bombing in Africa in October 2008, the Federal Bureau of Investigation began investigating whether a Somali Islamist group had recruited him on United States soil.

Instead of collecting information only on people about whom they had a tip or links to the teenager, agents fanned out to scrutinize Somali communities, including Seattle and Columbus, Ohio. The operation unfolded as the Bush administration was in the midst of relaxing some domestic intelligence-gathering rules.

The F.B.I.’s interpretation of those rules was recently made public when it released, in response to a Freedom of Information lawsuit, its “Domestic Investigations and Operations Guide.” The disclosure of the manual has opened the widest window yet onto how agents have been given greater power in the post-Sept. 11 era.

In seeking the revised rules, the bureau said it needed greater flexibility to hunt for would-be terrorists inside the United States. But the manual’s details have alarmed privacy advocates.

One section lays out a low threshold to start investigating a person or group as a potential security threat. Another allows agents to use ethnicity or religion as a factor — as long as it is not the only one — when selecting subjects for scrutiny.

“It raises fundamental questions about whether a domestic intelligence agency can protect civil liberties if they feel they have a right to collect broad personal information about people they don’t even suspect of wrongdoing,” said Mike German, a former F.B.I. agent who now works for the American Civil Liberties Union.

But Valerie Caproni, the F.B.I.’s general counsel, said the bureau has adequate safeguards to protect civil liberties as it looks for people who could pose a threat.

“Those who say the F.B.I. should not collect information on a person or group unless there is a specific reason to suspect that the target is up to no good seriously miss the mark,” Ms. Caproni said. “The F.B.I. has been told that we need to determine who poses a threat to the national security — not simply to investigate persons who have come onto our radar screen.”

The manual authorizes agents to open an “assessment” to “proactively” seek information about whether people or organizations are involved in national security threats.

Agents may begin such assessments against a target without a particular factual justification. The basis for such an inquiry “cannot be arbitrary or groundless speculation,” the manual says, but the standard is “difficult to define.”

Assessments permit agents to use potentially intrusive techniques, like sending confidential informants to infiltrate organizations and following and photographing targets in public.

F.B.I. agents previously had similar powers when looking for potential criminal activity. But until the recent changes, greater justification was required to use the powers in national security investigations because they receive less judicial oversight.

If agents turn up something specific to suggest wrongdoing, they can begin a “preliminary” or “full” investigation and use additional techniques, like wiretapping. But even if agents find nothing, the personal information they collect during assessments can be retained in F.B.I. databases, the manual says.

When selecting targets, agents are permitted to consider political speech or religion as one criterion. The manual tells agents not to engage in racial profiling, but it authorizes them to take into account “specific and relevant ethnic behavior” and to “identify locations of concentrated ethnic communities.”

Farhana Khera, president of Muslim Advocates, said the F.B.I. was harassing Muslim-Americans by singling them out for scrutiny. Her group was among those that sued the bureau. to release the manual.

“We have seen even in recent months the revelation of the F.B.I. going into mosques — not where they have a specific reason to believe there is criminal activity, but as ‘agent provocateurs’ who are trying to incite young individuals to join a purported terror plot,” Ms. Khera said. “We think the F.B.I. should be focused on following actual leads rather than putting entire communities under the microscope.”

Ms. Caproni, the F.B.I. lawyer, denied that the bureau engages in racial profiling. She cited the search for signs of the Somali group, Al Shabaab, linked to the Minneapolis teenager to illustrate why the manual allows agents to consider ethnicity when deciding where to look. In that case, the bureau worried that other such teenagers might return from Somalia to carry out domestic operations.

Agents are trained to ignore ethnicity when looking for groups that have no ethnic tie, like environmental extremists, she said, but “if you are looking for Al Shabaab, you are looking for Somalis.”

Among the manual’s safeguards, agents must use the “least intrusive investigative method that effectively accomplishes the operational objective.” When infiltrating an organization, agents cannot sabotage its “legitimate social or political agenda,” nor lead it “into criminal activity that otherwise probably would not have occurred.”

Portions of the manual were redacted, including pages about “undisclosed participation” in an organization’s activities by agents or informants, “requesting information without revealing F.B.I. affiliation or the true purpose of a request,” and using “ethnic/racial demographics.”

The attorney general guidelines for F.B.I. operations date back to 1976, when a Congressional investigation by the so-called Church Committee uncovered decades of illegal domestic spying by the bureau on groups perceived to be subversive — including civil rights, women’s rights and antiwar groups — under the bureau’s longtime former director, J. Edgar Hoover, who died in 1972.

The Church Committee proposed that rules for the F.B.I.’s domestic security investigations be written into federal law. To forestall legislation, the attorney general in the Ford administration, Edward Levi, issued his own guidelines that established such limits internally.

Since then, administrations of both parties have repeatedly adjusted the guidelines.

In September 2008, Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey signed the new F.B.I. guidelines that expanded changes begun under his predecessor, John Ashcroft, after the Sept. 11 attacks. The guidelines went into effect and the F.B.I. completed the manual putting them into place last December.

There are no signs that the current attorney general, Eric H. Holder Jr., plans to roll back the changes. A spokeswoman said Mr. Holder was monitoring them “to see how well they work” and would make refinements if necessary.

The F.B.I., however, is revising the manual. Ms. Caproni said she was taking part in weekly high-level meetings to evaluate suggestions from agents and expects about 20 changes.

Many proposals have been requests for greater flexibility. For example, some agents said requirements that they record in F.B.I. computers every assessment, no matter how minor, were too time consuming. But Ms. Caproni said the rule aided oversight and would not be changed.

She also said that the F.B.I. takes seriously its duty to protect freedom while preventing terrorist attacks. “I don’t like to think of us as a spy agency because that makes me really nervous,” she said. “We don’t want to live in an environment where people in the United States think the government is spying on them. That’s an oppressive environment to live in and we don’t want to live that way.”

What the public should understand, she continued, is that the F.B.I. is seeking to become a more intelligence-driven agency that can figure out how best to deploy its agents to get ahead of potential threats.

“And to do that,” she said, “you need information.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09302/1009222-84.stm?cmpid=news.xml#ixzz0VNGKvjww

Tehran Court Gives British Embassy ‘Plotter’ a Four-year Sentence

Filed under: Britain,Europe,Iran,Middle East,Northern Europe,Terrorism — mungurk @ 20:24

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October 29, 2009

A senior Iranian employee of the British Embassy in Tehran has been given a four-year prison sentence after being found guilty of fomenting violence at the behest of the British Government, The Times has learnt.

Hossein Rassam, 44, the embassy’s political counsellor, was sentenced in a closed courtroom this week, although the outcome is yet to be publicly announced. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office learnt of his sentence on Tuesday and summoned the Iranian ambassador in protest. The British ambassador in Tehran has also lodged an official complaint.

Mr Rassam was one of eight Iranian staff at the British Embassy arrested after mass street protests that erupted in cities across Iran following the disputed re-election of President Ahmadinejad on June 12.

Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, blamed the protests by opposition supporters on a British plot to bring down the regime. Britain denies any involvement. The embassy staff were among hundreds of people rounded up and detained after the disturbances. Seven others were released without charge but Mr Rassam was sent to the notorious Evin prison in Tehran and charged with being the “kingpin” behind a British plot.

In a statement to The Times, David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, said that Mr Rassam’s sentence was unacceptable and urged that it be immediately repealed. He dismissed the charges against Mr Rassam as “wholly without foundation”.

He added: “We understand the sentence can be appealed. I urge the authorities to conduct this quickly and overturn this harsh sentence. Such a decision is wholly unjustified and represents further harassment of embassy staff for going about their normal and legitimate duties.”

Mr Rassam is still on bail after his release from Evin prison in August. It is unclear whether he will have to return to jail immediately or remain on bail pending his appeal. Last night he was returning from a trip to the north of Tehran to break the news of his sentence to his elderly mother. His wife and son are no longer in the country.

Foreign journalists were barred from attending any of Mr Rassam’s hearings but the state news agency reported that he had told the court that a £300,000 budget had been allocated to establishing contacts with political groups before the election, including Mir Hossein Mousavi, the reformist opposition candidate who claims that he was robbed of victory.

Mr Miliband warned of negative consequences for Iran from countries other than Britain, calling Mr Rassam’s treatment “an attack on the entire diplomatic community”.

He was arrested on June 27 and accused of “acting against national security” — a catch-all charge for any kind of political dissent. He has worked at the embassy since 2004.

The first details of other charges were published in July by Fars, the state news agency, which also reported that he had given confessions that would “cast light on many hidden angles of the interference of Britain in Iran’s internal affairs in recent years”.

Fars said that Mr Rassam was accused of spying for Britain and feeding anti-Iranian reports and “internal intelligence” to the British Government in his role as the embassy’s chief political analyst. A government newspaper headline that greeted his first court appearance in August read: “The British Embassy: headquarters for the coup command.”

Fars reported: “He has proved his strong anti-Iranian approaches by linking British ambassadors with elements from anti-government spectrums.” Mr Rassam had also provided “internal intelligence” to Sir John Sawers when he served as political director of the Foreign Office, it said. Sir John is now head of M16, where one of his most important jobs is to oversee intelligence gathering on what Britain suspects is Iran’s nuclear weapons programme.

Mr Rassam was also accused of giving “strategic advice” to foreign journalists in Iran including the BBC, whose correspondent was expelled after allegations of provoking unrest. Fars said that Mr Rassam had been arrested for attending a demonstration on June 28. In fact, the embassy employees were arrested a day earlier.

News of Mr Rassam’s sentence came as Britain and other major powers awaited Iran’s reply on a proposed deal over its uranium stockpiles that may determine the future of diplomatic negotiations with the country.

Japan testfires missile interceptor off Hawaii

Filed under: Americas,Asia,East Asia,Japan,Military,North America,USA — mungurk @ 17:47

source

2009-10-28 19:29:19

TOKYO, Oct. 28 (Xinhua) — Japan has successfully test fired a missile interceptor off the coast of Hawaii in a joint exercise with the United States, the Defense Ministry said on Wednesday.

The interceptor missile was launched from the Japanese ship Myoko, and was the third such test that Japan has carried out since 1998.

Japan started to develop the weapons after the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea sent a long-range missile over the nation in 1998. Since then, the DPRK has developed nuclear weapons, increasing the need for Japan to have interceptors.

The Myoko was not notified before the missile, which was not live, was launched by the U.S. military. The ship is one of four Japanese vessels that is capable of shooting down ballistic missiles.

The missile was shot down while it was in space, and the interceptor is the first part of Japan’s missile defense system. If these interceptors miss, the nation also has missiles on the ground that can be used to down targets.

Since World War II, Japan has not been allowed to have an army, it does however, have a large self defense force that is equipped with some of the most advanced military technology in the world.

Editor: Lin Zhi

US re-designates Algerian group as terrorist body

Filed under: Africa,North Africa,Terrorism — mungurk @ 17:45

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October 28th, 2009 – 1:34 pm ICT by IANS

Washington, Oct 28 (IANS) The United States has re-designated Algerian-based group Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), an Islamist militia that aims to overthrow the Algerian government and institute an Islamic state, as a foreign terrorist organisation.
In the five years since its last review in 2004, AQIM, formerly known as the Salafist Group for Call and Combat, has conducted numerous suicide bombings and other lethal attacks that have killed or wounded hundreds in Northern Africa, the State Department said Tuesday.

The most lethal attack to date occurred on Dec 11, 2007, when two nearly simultaneous suicide operations attacked both a United Nations programme headquarters and the Algerian Constitutional Council, killing 42 people, including 17 UN employees, and wounding 158 others.

Noting that AQIM has broadened its area of operations outside of Algeria with increasing attacks in northern Mali, Niger, and Mauritania, the State Department spokesman, Ian Kelly said as recently as last August, it attacked the French Embassy in Nouakchott, Mauritania, wounding three.

“AQIM claimed responsibility for the June 2009 murder of an American NGO worker in Nouakchott, and the May 2009 murder of a British hostage in northern Mali. In December 2008, AQIM seized two Canadian diplomats working for the UN in Niger,” Kelly said.

The group has declared its intention to attack Algerian, French, and American targets. Besides the US, it has been similarly classed as a terrorist organization by the European Union.

“Terrorist designations play an important role in disrupting funding channels for al Qaida and other terrorist groups, including the Al Qaeda affiliates in different parts of the world.” said Coordinator for Counterterrorism Daniel Benjamin.

“They also send a message to other governments and financial institutions around the world of our determination to keep the pressure on these groups. They form an important element in creating joint efforts to limit the reach and capabilities of such terrorist organizations,” he said.

Trial of suspected Hezbollah cell resumes in Egypt

Filed under: Africa,Egypt,Lebanon,Middle East,North Africa,Terrorism — mungurk @ 17:42

source

Middle East News
Trial of suspected Hezbollah cell resumes in Egypt
By DPA
Oct 28, 2009, 10:16 GMTCairo – The trial of 26 men accused of plotting attacks and spying on Egypt on behalf of the Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah resumed in Egypt on Wednesday, officials in the Ministry of Interior confirmed.

The case has highlighted tensions between predominantly Sunni Egypt, Hezbollah and its patrons in Iran and Syria.

Two Lebanese nationals, five Palestinians, a Sudanese man and 18 Egyptians are on trial. The charges against them include planning attacks against tourists and the Suez Canal, possessing explosives and passing information to a foreign organization. Not all the defendants face the same charges.

When Egypt announced they had been arrested in April, President Hosny Mubarak and Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah traded televised barbs. Egypt summoned the head of the Iranian interests section in Cairo to register a formal complaint after Iranian politicians mocked the allegations.

Prosecutors said the ring was led by Lebanese national Sami Shehab, also known as Mohammed Youssef, whom Nasrallah has admitted is a member of the radical group sent to Egypt to deliver ‘logistical aid’ to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Nasrallah vehemently denied that Shehab or Hezbollah were plotting attacks against Egypt.

The trial had been due to start in August, but was adjourned twice at the request of defence lawyers.

Under Egypt’s Emergency Law, the verdicts of the Emergency State Security Court may not be appealed. Only the president may order a retrial or change the verdicts.

Egypt’s public prosecutor in April said he had received ‘certain information’ from Egypt’s domestic intelligence service, State Security Investigations, that a Hezbollah cell had rented apartments overlooking the Suez Canal in order to spy on traffic through the waterway.

He also accused the group of spying on resorts in Sinai and of renting rooms in fashionable districts where Hezbollah agents held training workshops.

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Somali pirates trade fire with French fishing boat; 7 arrested after warship rushes to scene

Filed under: Africa,Eastern Africa,Somalia,Terrorism — mungurk @ 17:40

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From The Associated Press, October 28, 2009 – 10:44 AM

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) – Somali pirates fired on a French fishing vessel and guards on board returned fire, prompting a military helicopter and warship to rush to the scene, authorities said Wednesday. Seven Somali pirates were arrested.

Pirates in two skiffs fired on the French vessel about 350 miles east of the Somali capital of Mogadishu, said Cmdr. John Harbour of the European Union Naval Force.

French military personnel on board the trawler, the “Cape Saint Vincent,” returned fire, French military spokesman Rear Adm. Christophe Prazuck said. It did not appear that any of the shots hit the pirates, he said.

A German warship was dispatched to the scene, as was a helicopter, which fired warning shots at the pirates, who then were seen throwing items on the boat overboard. Once the warship arrived, seven pirates were detained, the EU Naval Force said.

The attack off the east coast of Africa came Tuesday, the same day authorities said it appeared likely Somali pirates had captured a British couple sailing on a yacht. A Somali pirate told The Associated Press the couple were being taken to a village on Somalia’s southern coast.

International naval forces have been hunting for the British couple feared taken by pirates. Paul and Rachel Chandler were heading to Tanzania in their yacht, the Lynn Rival, when a distress signal was sent early Friday, according to the U.K. Maritime and Coast Guard Agency.

With the monsoon season recently ended in the Indian Ocean off East Africa, there have been a rash of attacks as pirates return to the open seas. More than 130 crew members from seven ships are currently being held, including about 70 from the latest attacks.

Pirates can make huge sums of money by capturing a vessel and demanding ransom. The high-seas hijackings have persisted despite an international armada of warships deployed by the United States, the European Union, NATO, Japan, South Korea and China to patrol the region.

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