HMCS Winnipeg helps thwart 2 pirate attacks - Action News
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HMCS Winnipeg helps thwart 2 pirate attacks

A Canadian warship assisted in intervening on Friday to protect two ships under attack by pirates off the coast of Somalia in the latest action off the troubled waters near the Horn of Africa.

A Canadian warshipintervenedon Fridayto protecttwo shipsunderattack by pirates off the coast of Somalia in the latest action in the troubled waters near theHorn of Africa.

A Sea King helicopter is seen hovering aft of HMCS Winnipeg. ((CBC))
The thwartedassaults took place in the Gulf of Aden a beehive of activity for piracy in recent years.

The first frantic distress call reached HMCS Winnipeg soon after the captain of a cargo ship spotted a speed boat closing fast, the CBC's David Common reported from aboard the Canadian navy's multi-role patrol frigate.

Within a minute of thecall, the piratesopened fire on the ship with rocket-propelled grenades.

HMCS Winnipeg, which is participating in a NATO counter-piracyoperation, went to full speed and dispatched its armed Sea King helicopter to the sceneabout 100 kilometres away.

"This is clearly an act of piracy if the merchantmen said they saw rocket-propelled grenades fired at them," the ship's captain, Cmdr. Craig Baines, told CBC News.

HMCS Winnipeg has disrupted numerous pirate attacks on vessels off the coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden. ((CBC))
The pirate boat turned away from the cargo ship and moved toward an American container vessel, whose captainstayed in constant contact with theCanadian sailors.

An Italian warshipthat was closer to the American vessel also launched its helicopter,which teamed up with the Sea King to stop the pirate vessel.

The pirates gave up and threw their weapons in the water just before the Italians boarded their vessel which pirates oftendo whenconfronted, Common said.

The international community hasincreased naval patrols in the Gulf of Aden to counter the growing scourge of piracy off Somalia's coast.

Last month, a team of U.S. Navy SEAL snipers killed three pirates holding an American captain hostage on a lifeboat after a foiled hijacking of his cargo vessel, the Maersk Alabama.

OnThursday,Defence Minister Peter MacKaysaid Canada is in negotiations to have Kenyan authorities prosecute pirates apprehended by the Canadian navy a shift in current policy to counter the threat of whatMacKay called"financial terrorism."

Pirates intercepted by Canadian forces off the coast of Somalia until now have been disarmed and then released, a policy that has sparked criticism from legal experts.

The Canadian government has maintained it cannot prosecute pirates captured by Canadian Forces, as it lacks jurisdiction under international law.