15
May 2012 Last
updated at 15:50 GMT
EU naval
forces have conducted their first raid on pirate bases on the Somali mainland,
saying they have destroyed several boats.
The EU
forces were transported by helicopter to the bases near the port of Haradhere ,
a well known pirate lair.
Anti-piracy
forces have been reluctant to attack mainland bases, fearing for the crew of
captured ships.
Somalia-based
pirates have seized vessels across the Indian Ocean
and demand huge ransoms for their release.
They are
believed to be holding about 17 ships and 300 crew.
The latest
incident involves the Greek-owned oil tanker Smyrni which was hijacked in the Arabian Sea last week.
The
Liberian-flagged tanker carrying 135,000 tonnes of oil is reported to be
heading for Somalia .
'Nothing spared'
BBC
security correspondent Frank Gardner says the attack on the land base is a
significant development in the fight against Somali piracy.
The EU
recently agreed to expand Operation Atalanta to allow forces to attack land
targets as well as those at sea, and this is the first time its forces have
used the new rules to attack a base on the mainland.
The attack
was carried out overnight and, according to the European forces, no Somalis were
hurt during the action.
The
multinational forces used helicopters in conjunction with two warships to leave
five of the pirates' fast attack craft "inoperable".
The European
naval mission issued a statement saying: "The focused, precise and
proportionate action was conducted from the air and all forces returned safely
to EU warships on completion".
A
spokesman added that the operation was carried out with the full support of the
Somali government after extensive surveillance, and the aim was to deny the
pirates a safe haven onshore.
Bile
Hussein, a pirate commander, told the Reuters news agency that speed boats,
fuel depots and an arms store had been targeted.
"They
destroyed our equipment to ashes. It was a key supplies centre for us," Mr
Hussein said.
"The
fuel contributed to the flames and destruction. Nothing was spared."
Military
vessels from Nato countries, the US ,
China , Russia , Japan
and India
are also involved in patrolling an area of ocean which is about the same size
as western Europe.
Two
decades of war in Somalia
have left the country without a fully-functioning government making it hard to
deal with piracy.
The
transitional government controls the capital Mogadishu , but al-Shabab militants hold many
southern and central areas of the country.
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