Somali young pirate suspect to face trial after test

Thu Oct 22, 2009 5:58am GMT
 

MADRID (Reuters) - A suspected Somali pirate captured after the hijacking of a Spanish fishing boat will face trial in the high court because a second medical test has confirmed he is older than 18, court sources said on Wednesday.

The Spanish navy captured the two Somalis in the Indian Ocean shortly after pirates overran the tuna boat Alakrana on October 2 and took hostage its multinational crew of 36.

The pirates are still in control of the boat from the Basque Country in northern Spain, and have said they will not discuss the crew's release until their two comrades are freed.

A Spanish court had decided to hand the younger suspect over to a juvenile court on Tuesday after an initial test based on samples taken from his wrist suggested he may be less than 18.

Court sources said a more exact test based on the suspect's teeth showed he was in fact old enough to face trial in a high court alongside the other suspect whose age was not in doubt.

The young man will appear in a juvenile court as originally scheduled on Thursday, but prosecutors will ask the judge to turn the case over to the high court.

Somali pirate gangs have caused havoc to shipping in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean in recent years, emboldened by millions of dollars in ransom payments.

But foreign navies were deployed off the Gulf of Aden at the beginning of the year and have guarded convoys along a transit corridor for merchant ships to pass through vulnerable points.

The number of attacks have now fallen in the Gulf of Aden, but pirates now sail further afield into the Indian Ocean where the vast open sea makes it harder to detect their small craft.

Spain has tried to garner support from Somalia's government to free the crew aboard the Alakrana. But the government only controls a small portion of the country, the rest of which is run by breakaway groups and Islamist rebels.

Photo
Uganda gays feel threatened by bill

Being gay or lesbian in Uganda is illegal and those who are risk being locked away for up to 14 years. Now, a new parliamentary bill wants gay people to face even stiffer penalties and is proposing life imprisonment and even death sentences in some cases...  Blog 

 
Photo
Ethiopian plane crash should not sully success story

When news of the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash broke this morning my heart sank at the thought of covering yet another negative story about Ethiopia.  Blog 

 
Photo
How will Chinese culture influence Africa?

So far, media coverage of China’s involvement in Africa has mostly been about investment. Stories of Chinese engineers in hard hats standing by roads up mountains in Ethiopia. Stories of Chinese farmers moving to Zambia.   Blog 

 
Photo
The unnumbered dead

The simple answer to the question of how many people died in Congo’s civil war is “too many”.  Blog 

 
Photo
Guinea tests Western influence in Africa

Whether Guinea’s absent junta leader Moussa Dadis Camara makes it back to his home country or not will be the latest test of Western powers’ dwindling influence in Africa.  Blog 

 
Photo
Africa-Asia ties flying high

Investment from China and other Asian countries was an important factor in several years of unprecedented growth in Africa before the global downturn hit.  Blog 

 
Powered by Reuters AlertNet. AlertNet provides news, images and insight from the world's disasters and conflicts and is brought to you by Reuters Foundation.