Login

 

Forgot password?
submarines shipbuilding Black Sea Fleet exercise Pacific Fleet Russian Navy Northern Fleet strategy cooperation Ukraine visits Russia piracy missiles trials Sevastopol history Sevmash presence contracts drills Baltic Fleet industry incident anti-piracy shipyards frigate training Gulf of Aden Somalia India developments reforms opinion Borei procurements policy Russia - India aircraft carrier Crimea arms exports USA St. Petersburg France tests financing Bulava Yury Dolgoruky US Navy Serdiukov cruise Mediterranean Zvezdochka NATO innovations United Shipbuilding Corporation Indian Navy Medvedev Arctic agreements commission Admiral Gorshkov Admiralteyskie Verfi Mistral Vladivostok accident hijacking corvettes overhaul Admiral Kuznetsov Russia - France anniversary Vysotsky Rosoboronexport event ceremony Yantar Severomorsk negotiations defense order conflict aircraft China deployment naval aviation investigations Black Sea Putin Varyag coast guard Novorossiysk Vikramaditya landing craft Far East crime marines meeting Severnaya Verf scandals memorials traditions Syria Japan statistics escort South Korea Neustrashimy Yasen tenders Marshal Shaposhnikov Admiral Chabanenko convoys Ukrainian Navy Severodvinsk Chirkov problems reinforcement tension firings tragedy technology Moskva search and rescue frontier service Baltic Sea Almaz provocation hostages upgrade Caspian Flotilla court Dmitry Donskoy rumors Turkey keel laying helicopters shipwreck Kilo class death Petr Veliky Admiral Panteleyev Atalanta Kaliningrad World War II Admiral Vinogradov Norway Rubin delivery launching patrols
Search
Our friends russian navy weapons world sailing ships
 
Tell a friend Print version

Ukraine denies some crew ill on hijacked Faina ship

01/19/2009 
Source: en.rian.ru

Ukraine's Foreign Ministry denied on Monday media reports that some Faina crew members, held captive by Somali pirates since September, have been seriously ill.

Somalia businessman Osman Farah, involved in talks with pirates, earlier said that seven crewmembers suffered from hypertension, intestinal infections and skin diseases and needed urgent medical aid. The vessel's Russian captain died of a heart attack in the early days of the hijacking.

"It is evident that they are not in perfect mental or physical health," the ministry's spokesman, Vasyl Kyrylych, said. "But, according to Ukraine's charge d'affairs in Kenya, their health is not as it was described by some media."

The spokesman said pirates could allow crew members to talk to their relatives by phone and make photos to show they are alive and well.

The Faina, with a crew of 17 Ukrainians, three Russians and one Latvian, was hijacked on September 25. The pirates initially demanded a $35 million ransom for the vessel, carrying 33 T-72 tanks and other heavy weaponry, but recent information suggests the figure has fallen to $3.5 million.

Back to the news list