NOIDA: After failing to get any help from the Centre, the families of 17 Indian crew members whose ship was hijacked by Somali pirates in March last year have sought help of a Pakistan-based NGO for their early release. Somali pirates had threatened they would start killing the Indian crew members if their families failed to arrange the ransom demanded by them by December 31, 2012.
The families have also moved Supreme Court demanding intervention by the central government for early release of the crew members. The case will be heard on Monday. The 17 Indian sailors are held hostage on board MV Royal Grace, a chemical tanker, and now their hopes lie with Pakistani activist Ansar Burney's efforts to help free them. Besides the Indians, there is a Pakistani, a Bangladeshi and two Nigerians sailors on board.|
Burney, who runs the Ansar Burney Trust, was earlier successful in getting the crew of MV Suez freed in June 2011 during another hijack by Somali pirates. Families of the crew members allege that they have been facing government apathy right from the start. "When we approached East India Shipping, the placement firm, its officials went to Dubai and met Burney ," Sheeja Singh, sister of one of the crew members, said. "The Pakistan and Nigerian governments is making efforts to rescue their citizens ," she said.
Hijacked Indian sailors' families SOS Pakistan activist
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Hijacked Indian sailors' families SOS Pakistan activist
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Hijacked Indian sailors' families SOS Pakistan activist