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NATO Agrees To Send Ships Vs Piracy - Diplomat

Issue 351
Front Page
Index
News Headlines
USAID   Announces New   Emergency Food Aid   Contribution to   Somalia
Local and Regional Affairs
Over 100 Somalis Drown In The Gulf Of Aden After Smugglers Forced Them Overboard
NATO Agrees To Send Ships Vs Piracy - Diplomat
Somali Troops Free British Oil Worker; 1 Killed
UN Security Council Backs Force Against Pirates
Kenyan Lawmakers Urge Probe of Weapons Seized by Pirates
Navy Chief Wants Ships To Hit Back At Pirates
New ‘Mega-Projects' Announced as Gulf Markets Tumble
Editorial
Recognizing Somaliland Will Help Security Of The Horn
International News
Former Finland President Wins Nobel Peace Prize
Obama Opens 5-Point Lead On McCain
Ex-President Carter Slams Bush On Market Crisis
G-7: 'Urgent Action' Needed
Features & Commentry
Written Answers From UK Parliament
South African Navy Ready To Tackle Somali Pirates
Hijacked Tanks 'For South Sudan '
Muslim World Precedent: Female To Perform Marriages
Thwarting Ethiopia's Continuing Game Plan In The Horn
The American Elephant Gored By The Horn Of Africa

Opinion

The Kulmiye Wonderful Drama
Hargeysa Readers' Club: Time to appreciate

 

BUDAPEST, Hungary, October 9, 2008 - NATO defense ministers agreed Thursday to send ships to escort vessels carrying food aid and protect them from piracy off the coast of Somalia, an alliance diplomat said.

The ministers agreed the ships would be sent "soon" and would work with other organizations including the European Union, the diplomat says.

He spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of the official announcement of the decision expected later Thursday.

Momentum has been growing for coordinated international action against the growing pirate menace following the seizure late last month of a Ukrainian cargo ship laden with tanks and heavy weaponry.

Several European Union countries last week said they would launch an anti-piracy patrol, and Russia announced it would cooperate with the West on fighting the pirates. U.S. warships, meanwhile, are being diverted from counterterrorism duties to respond to the seafaring bandits.

Details of the NATO plan were not immediately available. The alliance has been running naval patrols in the Mediterranean Sea since 2001 to deter terrorists, and allied military experts have discussed setting up a similar operation off the Horn of Africa.

Source: AP

 


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