Pirates who hijacked a Malaysian oil tanker last week have
fled on the ship's lifeboat after being pursued by a Malaysian navy ship,
officials said Friday.
Navy chief Abdul Aziz
Jaafar said the eight pirates, believed to be Indonesians, abandoned the MT
Orkim Harmony late Thursday. All 22 crew members were safe, except for an
Indonesian cook who was shot in the thigh, Abdul Aziz tweeted.
AP reports:
Jaafar said three navy ships
and two helicopters are searching for the pirates. The ship is sailing back to
Malaysia's northern Kuantan port, escorted by a naval ship, he said.
The tanker, carrying 7.5
million liters (2 million gallons) of gasoline worth 21 million ringgit (US$5.7
million), was headed to Kuantan when communications were lost June 11. The crew
consisted of 16 Malaysians, five Indonesians and a Myanmar national.
The Malaysian Maritime
Enforcement Agency said earlier that the ship was detected in waters off southern
Vietnam late Wednesday and had been repainted black from blue. Abdul Aziz also
tweeted pictures of the tanker, showing some letters of the name of the ship
painted over to give it a new name, "Kim Harmon."
He said the eight pirates
were armed with pistols and machetes, and spoke with Indonesian accents.
The maritime agency said
the hijacking was believed to be the work of a syndicate targeting vessels for
their cargos of fuel. It said this was the fifth theft in waters off southern
Malaysia this year.
It was the second tanker
hijacked this month. Another Malaysian tanker carrying diesel fuel was hijacked
June 4 in the same area and was released after its fuel was siphoned off.
Maritime officials have
said it is more difficult to steal gasoline because it is highly flammable and
requires special safety equipment.
The International
Maritime Bureau says attacks against small tankers off Southeast Asia's coasts
have been rising since last year.
Pirates have been
particularly active near Indonesia's Bintan island and in the South China Sea,
where 11 vessels were hijacked last year, the bureau said.
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