Indian sailors recount 10-month piracy ordeal

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Indian sailors on Friday recounted the horrors they faced during their 10-month captivity by Somali pirates who kept them in chains, often without food or water and treated them “like animals”.
The six sailors, freed after the payment of $2.1 million ransom, also thanked Pakistan’s government for its role in their release during an emotional reunion with family members at New Delhi airport.
Pakistan worked with Egypt to free the Egyptian-registered cargo ship Suez which was hijacked in August 2010 with the six Indians, four Pakistanis, 11 Egyptians and a Sri Lankan on board, who were held in basic conditions.
“We were in darkness, we were starving,” said N.K. Sharma, the captain of the ship. “We got just two meals a day. Sometimes we got water and sometimes not even that.
“There were moments when we lost all hope. Whatever Pakistan has done is praiseworthy. They came forward to our help and did not care about nationalities.”
Pakistan also sent two ships to help bring the men home, dropping them at Karachi on Thursday before their flight to India.
Pakistani human rights activist Ansar Burney has also been praised for his role in negotiations with the pirates and for helping raise the ransom.
Another Indian sailor Prashant Chauhan said he was thrilled to be free after an ordeal in which the captives where routinely beaten and poorly fed.
“We were chained and treated like animals,” Chauhan said. “They gave us just boiled rice to eat and sometimes we also got some spaghetti. It was worse than hell. They would drink and beat us with whatever they got hold of.
“Pakistan government has done a lot for us. Their ship Babar came to our rescue. We called up Indian ship Godavari a number of times but they never responded.”
India’s Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna said the government was relieved at their release and thanked Pakistan for its help.
“We are relieved that their ordeal has ended,” he said in a statement. “We appreciate the timely help extended to them and sailors of other countries, by the Pakistani navy.”
Krishna also said more concerted efforts were needed to tackle the threat posed by pirates.
“Let us not forget that the ordeal of over five hundred sailors from across the world, who are still in captivity of the pirates, is not yet over,” he said.
Piracy has surged in recent years off Somalia, a lawless, war-torn country that sits alongside one of the world’s most important shipping routes.