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Somali pirates attack French military flagship

Wed Oct 7, 11:10 am ET

NAIROBI (AFP) Somali pirates attempted to storm the French navy's 18,000

tonne flagship in the Indian Ocean after mistaking it for a cargo vessel, the

French military said on Wednesday.

The crew of La Somme, a 160-metre (525-foot) command vessel and fuel tanker,

easily saw off the brazen night-time assault by lightly armed fighters on two

lightweight skiffs and captured five pirates, a spokesman said.

"The pirates, who because of the darkness took the French ship for a commercial

vessel, were on board two vessels and opened fire with Kalashnikovs," Admiral

Christophe Prazuck said in Paris.

La Somme is the French command vessel in the Indian Ocean, overseeing French

air, sea and land forces fighting Somali pirates and hunting terrorists under

the banner of the US-led Operation Enduring Freedom.

Officers on the ship have directed commando operations to free French hostages

in the hands of Somali pirates.

The pirates tried to flee when they realised their mistake but were pursued by

French forces who, after an hour-long chase, caught one of the skiffs, Prazuck

said.

On it they found five men but no weapons, water or food as the pirates had

apparently thrown all of the boat's contents overboard, the spokesman said.

A Western official at sea in the area, speaking to AFP on condition of

anonymity, said that there had been an exchange of fire between the warship and

the pirate launches.

"One of the skiffs managed to get away in the night because La Somme was busy

with the first pirate boat," he said.

"Despite the arrival of other vessels, they haven't yet managed to find the

second boat," he said, adding that many warships in the area were busy hunting

another group which attacked a cargo ship off the Seychelles on Sunday.

The world's naval powers have deployed dozens of warships to the lawless waters

off Somalia over the past year to curb attacks by pirates in one of the world's

busiest maritime trade routes.

La Somme was operating 250 nautical miles (460 kilometres) off the Somali

coast, on its way to resupply fuel to frigates patrolling shipping lanes as

part of the European Union's Operation Atalanta anti-piracy mission.

This was not the first time that Somali pirates have mistakenly attacked a

French naval vessel. Several pirates were captured in May when they attempted

to board a frigate in the area.

Somalia has had no proper government since it plunged into lawlessness after

President Mohamed Siad Barre was overthrown in 1991.

The country is riven by factional fighting and pirate gangs operate freely from

several ports along its Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden coasts.

According to the environmental watchdog Ecoterra International, at least 163

attacks have been carried out by Somali pirates since the start of 2009 alone,

47 of them successful hijackings.

Last year, more than 130 merchant ships were attacked, an increase of more than

200 percent on 2007, according to the International Maritime Bureau's Piracy

Reporting Centre in Kuala Lumpur.

Pirates have in recent weeks resumed attacks with the end of the monsoon

season. Last week Somali gunmen captured Spanish fishing boat The Alakrana with

36 crew members in the Indian Ocean.

The US Maritime Administration warned last month that the end of the monsoon

season was likely to bring an increase in piracy off Somalia and urged shipping

companies to be vigilant.

Calmer waters allow pirates, who often operate in small fibreglass skiffs towed

out to sea by captured fishing vessels, to hijack freighters, trawlers and

private yachts. Cruise vessels have also been attacked.