Freed German container ship docks in Kenya

By Celestine Achieng

MOMBASA, Kenya, Aug 8

A German container ship held by Somali pirates for four months arrived at Kenya's Mombasa port on Saturday after a $2.7 million ransom was paid for the release of its 24 crew.

The 20,000-tonne Hansa Stavanger was hijacked on April 4 about 650 km (400 miles) off the southern Somali port of Kismayu with 14 Filipinos, five Germans, three Russians and two Ukrainians on board. All were in good health on Saturday.

"I am more than happy to say that all 24 crew members have now undergone proper medical attention," Torsten Ites, a senior naval officer in the European Union's anti-piracy Operation Atalanta, told a news conference in Mombasa.

"They are slowly but surely recovering ... They are optimistic and eager to start their lives in freedom away from the pirates."

Gangs of Somali pirates target vessels using the shipping lanes linking Europe to Asia through the Gulf of Aden, making tens of millions of dollars in ransoms.

Pirates freed the Hansa Stavanger, which is owned by the Hamburg shipping company Leonardt & Blumberg, on Monday after saying they had received a $2.7 million ransom.

(Reuters)