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OIL AND GAS
Indonesia says oil tanker 'taken by crew' not hijacked
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) Aug 17, 2016


An oil tanker carrying 900,000 litres of diesel, believed hijacked in Malaysia, has been taken back to Indonesia by its crew following a commercial dispute, the Indonesian navy said Wednesday.

"The preliminary assessment is the vessel was not hijacked but was taken by the crew back to Batam," the Indonesian navy said in a statement in reference to the island near Singapore.

The navy said the captain had contacted its agent twice to say the vessel was returning to Batam because of an internal management problem within the company.

The incident is "linked closely to internal problems between the (Indonesian) owner, the (Malaysian)charterer and the (Indonesian) crew," said Mohamad Taha Ibrahim of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency.

Earlier Malaysian maritime authorities said the vessel had been hijacked and was heading towards Indonesian waters.

"Initial investigations on the MT Vier Harmoni revealed that the ship was hijacked due to internal problems," Ahmad Puzi Kahar, Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency chief, said in a tweet.

He did not elaborate, but the phrase "internal problems" has been used in the past to refer to involvement by a ship's crew.

Puzi added that the ship was transporting diesel worth about 1.57 million ringgit ($392,000).

A scourge for centuries, piracy in Southeast Asian had been significantly reduced over the past decade thanks to stepped-up regional cooperation and maritime patrols.

However, in 2015 the region was struck by a string of hijackings with criminal gangs targeting slow-moving tankers carrying valuable petrol which they would offload and sell.

In June 2015, pirates commandeered a Malaysian-flagged tanker in the South China Sea for a week before escaping from the vessel in a lifeboat.

But the London-based International Maritime Bureau reported last month that improved security at designated anchorages in Indonesia led to a decline in low-level theft targeting ships in its waters.

According to the IMB, in the first six months of 2016 the number of incidents dropped to 24, compared with 54 during the same time in 2015.

About one-third of global trade flows through the Malacca Strait, which runs between Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore.

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