Updated
Updated · Al Jazeera English · May 7
Somali Pirates Abandon Hijacked Fahad-4 After 11-Man Crew Fails to Launch Further Attacks
Updated
Updated · Al Jazeera English · May 7

Somali Pirates Abandon Hijacked Fahad-4 After 11-Man Crew Fails to Launch Further Attacks

3 articles · Updated · Al Jazeera English · May 7
  • May 4 saw Somali pirates abandon the UAE dhow Fahad-4 in the Arabian Sea after holding it since late April and trying to use it as a mothership for new raids.
  • 11 pirates gave up the vessel as supplies ran low and ships crossing Somali waters stayed on heightened alert, blunting attempts to strike other targets, Puntland security officials told AFP.
  • No immediate information was available on the fate of the lemon-laden dhow’s crew, and Somali authorities had not publicly detailed the vessel’s status.
  • The failed operation still comes amid a broader piracy resurgence: JMIC has raised the threat level to “severe,” and pirates continue to hold vessels including Honour 25, Sward and Eureka.
  • Analysts say the revival has been enabled by naval patrols shifting since 2023 toward Houthi-related Red Sea threats and Hormuz tensions, reopening space for attacks in a corridor once costing the global economy up to $18 billion a year.
With navies distracted by Yemen, are tech-savvy pirates creating an unavoidable new crisis for global trade?
Is this a simple crime wave, or a symptom of a larger geopolitical failure in the Indian Ocean?