September 7, 2010 11:37 AM

French Navy Rescues Sailboat From Pirates

(CBS/AP)  As U.S. attention was fixed on the hostage situation involving an American captain and Somali pirates, France also had its own high-seas crisis to deal with.

The French Navy stormed a French sailboat being held by pirates in the Gulf of Aden, off the coast of Somalia, killing one hostage and two pirates in the operation, a presidential statement said Friday.

The navy also freed four remaining hostages, including one child, who were seized Saturday when pirates boarded their ship, the Tanit. Three other pirates were taken prisoner.

France's defense minister said the pirates' threat to execute hostages prompted the rescue attempt.

It was not immediately clear where the rescue operation occurred. It did not appear to be in any proximity to the current standoff involving an American captain being held hostage.

It was the third time the French have freed hostages from the hands of pirates but the first time that a hostage had been killed. The French presidential statement said the boat was being steered toward the Somali coast.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy's office said the death of one of five hostages came at the end of a two-day ordeal in the pirate-infested waters where the seizure of vessels by Somali pirates has become a common occurrence.

"During the operation, a hostage was unfortunately killed," the statement said, adding that the four other hostages, including the child, were "safe and sound."

France's policy is to refuse to accept acts of piracy and avoid having French citizens taken ashore as hostages, the statement said.

The operation began Thursday when a Navy vessel contacted the pirates and "immobilized" the Tanit, it said.

"Negotiations were started to persuade the pirates to give up their criminal undertaking," said the statement.

"Today, threats were more precise, with the pirates refusing proposals and the Tanit moving toward the coast. An operation to free the hostages was decided."

Details of the operation were not disclosed.

The passengers in the Tanit, a tourist boat, had repeatedly been warned to avoid the dangerous waters around Somalia and the Gulf of Aden.

The boat, a Norwegian-made 47.5-foot sailboat with a single mast, was heading for the coast of Kenya when it was seized. The owners, a French couple, Florence and Chloe Lemacon had left the French port of Vanves in Brittany in July 2009 on an adventure with their three-year-old son, according to their blog. Two friends had joined them along the way.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by ubrew12 April 11, 2009 4:48 AM EDT
Article: "France's policy is to refuse to accept acts of piracy and avoid having French citizens taken ashore as hostages"

Russia goes even further than that. Lets just say that if you kidnap or harm a Russian citizen, you, your family, and everyone you ever knew will dearly regret it. People get the message pretty quickly.
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by mje222 April 10, 2009 11:41 PM EDT
France had a set why don't we
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by of11of April 10, 2009 7:52 PM EDT
why is it that while the pirates have g.p.s. and other sophisticated radr equip. and notably can use it,

yet..

the gov.'s have the ability to do what with g.p.s.?... can they see vessels leaving somalia waters?. isn't it obvious that these b more carefully looked at ?
Reply to this comment
by rational_1 April 10, 2009 3:22 PM EDT
I think the general rule should be that any pirate caught by any navy should be summarily tossed overboard and the pirate ships sunk. If these guys start disappearing it will make the rest think twice (or thrice) before setting sail. Aaaaarggghhhh
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