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February 10, 2010
         
Five freed crew members of Stolt Valor reach Mumbai
Updated on Monday, November 24, 2008, 00:00 IST
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Mumbai, Nov 24: After spending two months in their hijacked merchant ship, five of the 18 Indian sailors freed by pirates returned home on Monday to en emotional welcome and recounted their "nightmare" when they were held at gun-point on the bridge of the ship round the clock.

The five sailors flew into Mumbai from Omani Capital Muscat at 5 AM and were greeted by relatives and friends amid scenes of joy and relief writ large on their faces.

The Japanese-owned chemical tanker M V Stolt Valor was hijacked by Somali pirates in Gulf of Aden on September 15 and the crew of 22 including the 18 Indian sailors was kept hostage at the port of Eyl in Somalia. The crew was released on November 15 after a ransom of up to 2.5 million dollars was paid by its owners.

Naveed Burondkar, Isidore Fernandes, Alistair Fernandes, Omprakash Shukla and Santosh Patil, who were those arrrived, addressed a news conference upon their arrival. The others are expected to fly to their respective destinations from Muscat in the coming days, officials said.

"There was no physical torture, only mental torture of having to sit at gun-point all the time," Burondkar said.

Burondkar, a resident of Murud in Maharashtra, said the Somali pirates, numbering about 30, were carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles and rocket propelled grenades (RPG).

"Their only purpose was to get money and they seemed like they would do anything for it," the 20-year-old trainee officer said, adding they were drug addicts.

Alistair said they spent 24 hours of the day at gun-point on the bridge of the ship and could not do anything without the permission of the captors.

"All we had to do was to sit on the bridge of the ship the whole day. After we were hijacked I had to cook for the pirates for nine days but after that there was some food arranged," said Isidore , who was the head cook.

"It was a tense time on board the ship and we had to manage somehow. I managed to speak to my family about four times during the captivity," Isidore said.

The crew survived on a diet of lentils and meat while being held hostage and there was just enough staocks for all the crew, he added.

"Even if we had to take a shower, only two of us at a time would be allowed to go for it and that also under their supervision. We had to take permission for everything," said Alistair, who worked in the engine room of the ship.

Burondkar said the pirates seemed to be desperate people who could do anything for getting the ransom amount.

The captain had warned them prior to sailing through the Gulf of Aden that there was a risk of piracy but despite keeping watches on the deck they could not prevent the ship from being captured, he said.

Describing the hijack, he said, "the pirate ship fired an RPG at the ship but it fell 10 to 15 metres short and while continuously firing at us they boarded the ship."

The pirates had a single negotiator who would talk to the ship's owners and then inform the ship's captain about the progress. The captain would then inform the crew about it, the sailors said.

The crew were sometimes allowed to make brief phone calls to their familie, often emotional, Alistair said.

Burondkar said the pirates were constantly in touch with each other regarding other hijacked ships and there also seemed to be rivalries between the different pirate groups.

Burondkar, Alistair and Burondkar said they presently have no plans to stop sailing and would take a break prior to returning to the seas again.

"These things don't happen only on sea but also on land where you have terrorism. What has happened was a nightmare and I will go sailing again," Burondkar said.

Bureau Report


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