logo
‘We are under attack by pirates. Please stay in your cabin': The threat to cruise ships that refuses to go away

‘We are under attack by pirates. Please stay in your cabin': The threat to cruise ships that refuses to go away

Yahoo03-04-2025
Piracy on the high seas sounds like something from a bygone era, but the menace of armed robbery is still a very real threat in certain parts of the world.
The menace posed to cruise ships in particular hit the headlines recently when holidaymakers aboard Cunard's Queen Anne were told to turn off their cabin lights and avoid outside decks as they sailed through a notorious area of the Philippines.
An announcement on board, recorded and shared by TikTok user @lilydapink, said: 'This area is known for piracy threats, therefore we will be operating at a heightened level of security alertness. In the unlikely event of an emergency, a broadcast will be made by the bridge.'
In the past, cruise ships have been attacked and even boarded – during one such incident, passengers tried to fight off armed pirates themselves by throwing furniture. But is the lingering danger real, and how do cruise ships prepare for it?
There have been six reported attacks on cruise ships since 2005. Le Ponant was boarded was off the coast of Somalia in 2008, as was the MSC Melody in 2009; Seabourn Spirit was fired upon in the same waters in 2005; in 2008, Nautica was fired upon in the Gulf of Aden; Saga's Spirit of Adventure was threatened when pirates closed off the coast of Tanzania in 2011; and in 2012, several small boats approached Azamara Journey off the coast of Oman.
French sailing ship Le Ponant was boarded by pirates off the coast of Somalia in 2008. The 32-cabin vessel was carrying 30 crew but no passengers. A French frigate and a helicopter from a Canadian warship were sent to track the yacht. The hostages were later released, unharmed, after the payment of a £2 million ransom.
France then mounted a commando raid on the mainland to capture the kidnappers, who were put on trial in Paris. Four of the Somali pirates received sentences ranging from four to 10 years. The vessel continues to sail for Ponant.
The waters off Somalia, Indonesia and the Singapore Straits became more dangerous for merchant shipping in 2024 than the previous year, contributing to the 116 piracy incidents – more than two a week – reported worldwide to the International Maritime Bureau. Other incidents took place in Bangladesh, the Gulf of Guinea, Colombia and Guyana.
In all, 94 vessels were boarded, there were 13 attempted attacks, six vessels were hijacked and three fired upon. The number of crew taken hostage rose from 73 in 2023 to 126 last year and guns were used in 26 attacks. None of the vessels were carrying passengers and no cruise ships were involved.
Set up in 1981, initially to combat fraud at sea, the IMB now deals with international piracy from its base in Wapping, east London – appropriately close to Execution Dock, where Scottish buccaneer Captain William Kidd was hanged in 1701.
The non-profit-making organisation tracks all cases of piracy (defined as being on the open seas), as well as armed robbery (in territorial waters). Threats to shipping vary from thefts from vessels in port to kidnap and ransom of crew. The bureau can also broadcast radio warnings to ships during live incidents.
In November 2008, Jason Gelineau was the general manager on board Oceania ship Nautica in the Gulf of Aden when he heard 'Mr Skylight, contact reception' – the line's codeword for pirate activity.
Two skiffs were approaching the bow and stern of the ship, firing into the air. Captain Jurica Brajcic took immediate action by starting a zig-zag manoeuvre to create a wake that would capsize the boats if they came close. Meanwhile, security – mostly ex-military personnel from India or Israel – who were on a 24-hour watch, had water cannons set up on both port and starboard sides, and were setting up long-range acoustic devices installed on the bridge wings.
'The captain, usually a very stoic person, was shaking,' Mr Gelineau said afterwards. 'He told me the skiffs had come as close as 300m, then stopped and turned towards a cargo ship sailing in the opposite direction.'
Donna Meads-Barlow was on MSC Melody with her husband and three children off the coast of Somalia in April 2009 when the cruise director announced: 'We are under attack by pirates. Please stay in your cabin, keep the curtains shut and the lights out. Please don't panic, help is on its way.' Mrs Meads-Barlow gathered her sleeping children from another cabin and prayed as she heard banging and shouting during the night.
'We could hear a heck of a commotion going on outside in the corridors of our cabin', she recounted, 'and what was even more scary was that we didn't know if the pirates had boarded and taken control of our ship… We lay there for hours and held hands so tight that we almost cut off circulation.'
When she and her husband Brian ventured out the next morning, they found windows shattered by bullets. 'People were everywhere, talking and pointing and just outside the Blue Ribard Bar, at exactly the lounge chairs we were sitting at the previous night, was a shattered window with a huge bullet hole through it.'
It transpired that eight pirates wearing balaclavas had tried to board the ship and opened fire with AK-47 rifles. Security guards fired eight shots into the air and let off two emergency flares to scare them away while some of the 1,200 passengers took matters into their own hands and hurled tables and chairs down at them. 'It was like war,' Captain Ciro Pinto recounted the following day. A Spanish warship eventually arrived to escort MSC Melody from the area.
Cyrus Mody, the IMB's deputy director, was surprised to read the report about Queen Anne as, even in Somalia, pirate attacks are markedly reduced compared to the worst years of 2008-2012 and 2021-22. Rather, he regards the whole of south-east Asia – including Indonesia and the Philippines – as of minimal risk for cruise ships.
'The only point of access to the vessel I would visualise is from the stern and when a cruise ship is under way she's churning up a lot of water behind, so getting to her would be a task,' he said. 'Unlike merchant vessels, cruise ships are also very well enclosed so are much more difficult for a robber to board.
'Then there's the sheer number of people around. To hijack a vessel you need to get command of the bridge – and the pirates would have to get up 17 decks or so to get there. Plus cruise ships have their own security.'
The threat is now minimal, but over the last few decades, there have been various precautions that ships have taken. Rosanna Ivkovic was a hostess on Fred Olsen's Black Watch during a five-month world cruise in 2014. 'When we were approaching the Somalia region, a specialist team came on board,' she says.
'Barbed wire was installed around the railings of the ship, as well as water cannons, and we had armed specialists on constant watch. We spent a day at sea rehearsing how we should act if pirates came aboard with passengers being allocated 'safe' areas in corridors away from windows and exterior doors.'
In 2005, crew on Seabourn Spirit used a water hose and sonic weapon to repel pirates who fired machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades at the ship.
Six years later, hundreds of passengers on Saga's Spirit of Adventure who had just sat down to a formal dinner were ordered below deck when pirates closed in off the coast of Tanzania.
A spokesperson for industry body CLIA said: 'Our members prioritise safety and security in all their operations and closely monitor planned routes, including working closely with global security experts and government authorities.
'Cruise lines also have the unique ability to adjust routes and itineraries if needed in the best interest of passengers and crew. Cruise lines have maintained an exceptional safety record thanks to ongoing intensive training, vigilance and response plans, which include a strong coordinated approach across the maritime sector and with international bodies.'
A Cunard spokesperson said of the Queen Anne story: 'As part of standard maritime procedures, our captains may make precautionary announcements when sailing through certain regions. There was no specific threat to the ship or its guests, and our onboard experience remained uninterrupted.'
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ICE Arrests Influencer Tatiana Martinez During Live Stream
ICE Arrests Influencer Tatiana Martinez During Live Stream

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

ICE Arrests Influencer Tatiana Martinez During Live Stream

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A Colombian immigrant TikTok influencer was detained by immigration agents after a confrontation outside her Los Angeles residence that unfolded live on social media. Leidy Tatiana Mafla-Martinez was apprehended by federal authorities while streaming on TikTok from her Tesla on Friday, August 15, according to the Department of Homeland Security. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Newsweek that Martinez was arrested because of a prior DUI conviction in Los Angeles. Leidy Tatiana Mafla-Martinez was apprehended by federal authorities on Friday, August 15, according to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Leidy Tatiana Mafla-Martinez was apprehended by federal authorities on Friday, August 15, according to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Twitter Why It Matters Immigration authorities have been under heightened scrutiny amid allegations of misconduct, with the agency at the center of the national debate over immigration policy. That spotlight has widened since President Donald Trump ordered a ramp-up in arrests to fulfill his pledge of mass deportations, prompting renewed questions about the legality and human impact of ICE's enforcement practices. The widespread deportation efforts have attracted resistance from immigrant rights advocates. What To Know Martinez—who entered the U.S. in 2022, according to DHS—posts under the handle @tatianamartinez_02. She has gained attention for documenting ICE operations, sharing "know your rights" guidance, and offering commentary on immigration enforcement. Footage circulating on social media appears to show Martinez seated in a Tesla when federal agents approached, opened the driver's side door, and pulled her onto the pavement. The video shows her being restrained face down with a covering placed over her head, and observers can be heard calling for medical assistance before she appears motionless. McLaughlin added that the arrest was further complicated when "an individual unlawfully towed a government police vehicle." Footage on social media shows a federal agent running after a vehicle after the tow truck removes the car. "He mocked and videotaped ICE officers chasing after him. Secretary Noem has been clear: Anyone who seeks to impede law enforcement will be found and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law," McLaughlin said. Following the incident, Martinez was transported to White Memorial Hospital and subsequently transferred to a downtown detention center, according to L.A. Taco. McLaughlin said Martinez reported shortness of breath during her arrest and was given medical treatment. The influencer, who has amassed more than 37,000 followers on TikTok, has been actively creating content that documents immigration enforcement since Trump directed his administration to remove millions of migrants without legal status. DHS has claimed that ICE agents are facing a 1000 percent increase in assaults against them; however, the agency has not provided any detailed breakdowns of the allegations. What People Are Saying Tricia McLaughlin told Newsweek: "On August 15, ICE arrested Leidy Tatiana Mafla-Martinez, a criminal illegal alien from Colombia who was convicted for driving under the influence in Los Angeles. This criminal illegal alien entered the country in 2022 and was RELEASED by the Biden administration. During her arrest, Martinez claimed to experience shortness of breath. She was given proper medical treatment and will be held in ICE custody pending removal proceedings." The Sidewalk School, an immigrant rights group, wrote in a post on Instagram: "She was pulled screaming from her Tesla, later taken by ambulance to the hospital." David Earl Williams III, a Democrat, wrote on Facebook: "ICE violently arrested activist-journalist Tatiana Martinez in LA, slamming her to the ground on livestream. After a brief hospital release, she was taken back into custody. In a wild twist, one of ICE's SUVs was towed mid-arrest—turning their crackdown into a symbol of resistance." What Happens Next Martinez will remain in ICE custody pending further removal proceedings.

Deported from US, these social media influencers are now monetizing their misfortune
Deported from US, these social media influencers are now monetizing their misfortune

USA Today

time7 hours ago

  • USA Today

Deported from US, these social media influencers are now monetizing their misfortune

More than 70,000 Mexicans were deported from the US in the first six months of the year. Now, they're (re)building lives south of the border. Deported and alone, Annie Garcia landed in Mexico with $40 in her pocket, a criminal record in the United States behind her and an unknown future ahead in a country she barely remembered. Fast forward to the present, to a video shared with her more than half-a-million social media followers in August. Her hair blows in the wind as she speeds on a boat through an emerald sea. She tagged the clip: #LifeAfterDeportation. Expelled from the United States, young Mexican immigrants like Garcia, 35, are documenting the aftermath of their deportation online. Their videos – raw grief over what they lost in America, surprise and gratitude for what they've found in Mexico – are rapidly gaining them tens of thousands of followers. At least a dozen of these deportees-turned-influencers, Garcia included, have started over in Mexico's west coast beach gem, Puerto Vallarta. 'If there's one thing I wish my content could embody it's how much life there is on this side of the border," Garcia wrote June 15 on Instagram. "Our countries aren't what they were 20 or 30 years ago when our parents left." Returning to an unfamiliar 'home' More than 70,000 Mexican nationals were deported from the United States to Mexico in the first six months of 2025, according to Mexico's Interior Ministry. That's down from the more than 102,000 deported during the same six-month period in 2024, when people were being deported after crossing the border. Now, the people being deported are more likely to have built lives and families in the United States. With President Donald Trump's aggressive mass deportation campaign underway, Francisco Hernández-Corona feared being detained. So he self-deported to Mexico, accompanied by his husband. He started vlogging. The 30-something Harvard graduate and former Dreamer had been taken to the United States illegally as a boy, he explained on TikTok. Multiple attempts to legalize his status in the United States failed. In June, he posted his migration – and self-deportation – stories online. Between photos of golden sunsets and mouthwatering tacos, he posted in July: "Self-deporting isn't always freedom and joy and new adventures. Sometimes it's pain and nostalgia and anger and sadness. Sometimes you just miss the home that was." 'Life in the pueblo is not easy' Mexico remains a country of extremes, where stunning vistas and limitless wealth can be found in big cities and beach resorts, while hardship and poverty often overwhelm smaller communities. Olga Mijangos was deported from Las Vegas in on Christmas Eve 2024, two years after being charged with a DUI. She returned to the Oaxaca state pueblo she had left when she was 5. Mijangos, 33, has tattoos on her neck, stylized brows and long lashes – all part of her Vegas style. Back in her hometown, she began posting videos of goats being herded through the streets; the community rodeo; the traditional foods she began cooking. She posted videos from her first job: harvesting and cleaning cucumbers, earning 300 pesos a day, or $15. "I clearly understand why my mother decided to take us when we were little. Life in the pueblo is not easy," she said in a video of the cucumber harvest. "There is hard-living. There is poverty." Struggling to make ends meet for her family, including two children with her in Mexico and one in the United States, she moved to Puerto Vallarta where she met Garcia and Hernández-Corona. They began forming an in-real-life community of deportees-turned-influencers and others who left the U.S. They meet up for dinner at least once a month, and they create content. In their videos, they're having fun, drinks, laughs. But they're also celebrating what binds them to each other and to their parents' migration stories before them: their capacity for reinvention, and their resilience. "I'm very proud to be Mexican, and I'm learning to love a country I didn't get to grow up in, but I shouldn't have had to leave the home I knew to find peace and freedom," said Hernández-Corona, a clinical psychologist, in a July post on TikTok. "This isn't a blessing. It's resilience." Spanish skills, savings and support all matter A lot of their content has the draw of a classic American up-by-their-bootstraps success story, with a modern social media twist: from hardship to sponsorship. But the reality is that deportees' experience of building a life in Mexico can vary dramatically, depending on their earning capacity, language and cultural skills, and other factors, said Israel Ibarra González, a professor of migration studies at Mexico's Colegio de la Frontera Norte university. Deportees with savings in U.S. dollars and a college degree, those who speak Spanish and have supportive relatives in Mexico, may have an easier time than those who don't, he said. Others may face life-threatening risks upon their return, from the violence of organized crime to political persecution or death threats. "However much violence they've lived with in the United States, it's not the same as going back to a war zone," Ibarra González said, referring to certain Mexican states where drug cartels are actively battling for territorial control. Wherever they land – with the exception of some cosmopolitan cities – deported Mexicans have faced local prejudices, too. They've often been viewed as criminals, or their deportations as a failure. "Did I feel a lot of judgment? Absolutely," Mijangos said of her return to Oaxaca. "Even though it's my roots, I basically came from a different world. I have tattoos. I lived my life a certain way that they don't. I could feel people talking." But friends back home in Vegas, and new friends in Mexico, started encouraging her to share her deportation journey. It took her a few weeks to work up the courage. She posted a video of sending her U.S. citizen son to a Mexican school. It racked up nearly 14 million views and 2 million "likes" on TikTok, she said. Suddenly, TikTok was asking if she wanted to join the app's content creators rewards program. 'Your criminal record doesn't follow you' By taking their stories online, deported content creators say they are dismantling longstanding taboos around deportation in Mexico, shining a light on their experiences as Mexicans who didn't grow up in Mexico, and on their past mistakes. Garcia speaks openly on her social media about the financial crimes she committed in her 20s, for which she was charged and convicted, and that ultimately led to her deportation. She migrated to the United States when she was 4 years old, "out of necessity," she said. Her mother married an American citizen in Salt Lake City, Utah, and she and her mother both became legal permanent residents. But when Garcia began acting out as a child, the state intervened. "I was taken from my mother at the age of 12 because I had behavioral issues," she told USA TODAY. "I was separated from my family, and I grew up with other juveniles with behavior (problems)." As a young single mother, she would steal from her employers when she couldn't pay the bills, she said. In Mexico she found a clean slate. "Your criminal record doesn't follow you," once you've paid your debt to society in the United States, Garcia tells her followers. "You can pursue higher education. Any debts you had in the U.S. do not follow you here." As Trump's immigration crackdown widens, Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo has been publicly offering moral support to Mexicans facing deportation. She has called them "heroes and heroines" who "have contributed to the United States their entire lives." "We're going to keep defending our brothers and sisters there," she said in a June 25 news conference. 'Maybe … things will change' Garcia's social media accounts have grown so popular that she's earning a living, in part, from content creation. She is doing research on reintegration after deportation for an American university. And she has "tunnel vision," she said, on completing a law degree in Mexico. The pain of her deportation, and the losses it brought with it, are mostly in the past. Except when she catches news of the immigration raids in the United States. The memories of her detention, and her separation from her five children, including an infant, remain fresh. It took Garcia more than a year after her 2017 deportation to win custody of her children, to bring them to Mexico. "It's very, very triggering to me to see what's going on up there," she said. "It's a bittersweet feeling. I feel safe. I feel relief. We're here. It doesn't affect us any more. But it feels heartbreaking to see other families living through it. "When I first started sharing my story my idea was, 'Maybe if I talk about this, things will change'" in the United States, she said. She kept at it, despite facing hate and trolls online. She kept posting, even after losing two jobs in Mexico for openly discussing her deportation and criminal past on social media. She kept sharing, thinking, she said: "This is what is going to change things one day: us putting our stories out there."

French leader Macron vows justice after unknown attackers chop down tree honoring murdered Jew
French leader Macron vows justice after unknown attackers chop down tree honoring murdered Jew

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

French leader Macron vows justice after unknown attackers chop down tree honoring murdered Jew

PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron pledged Friday that no effort will be spared to track down and prosecute unknown attackers who chopped down an olive tree planted in homage to a French Jew murdered in 2006. The commemorative tree for Ilan Halimi, planted 14 years ago in the northern Paris suburb of Épinay-sur-Seine, was felled on Wednesday night, seemingly with a chainsaw. The town posted a photo on its Facebook page showing the tree's leafy, bushy top completely severed from its base, leaving just the stump poking from the ground. 'Cutting down the tree that honored Ilan Halimi is an attempt to kill him for a second time,' Macron posted on X. 'It will not succeed: the Nation will not forget this child of France, killed because he was Jewish.' 'All means are being deployed to punish this act of hatred. In the face of antisemitism, the Republic is always uncompromising.' he added. Halimi was found naked, handcuffed and covered with burn marks near railroad tracks in the Essonne region south of Paris on Feb. 13, 2006. He died on the way to the hospital after being held captive and tortured for more than three weeks. He was 23. The brutal killing revived worries in France about antisemitism and led to deep anxiety in France's Jewish community, the largest in western Europe. French Prime Minister François Bayrou, in a post on X, said the olive tree 'was felled by antisemitic hatred.' 'No crime can uproot memory. The never-ending fight against the deadly poison of hatred is our foremost duty,' he wrote. In a separate post, the Paris police chief condemned 'this ignoble act' and said an investigation has been launched. 'Everything will be done to find the perpetrators and deliver them to justice,' he pledged. Attackers have previously desecrated other efforts to keep Halimi's memory alive. In 2017, a commemorative plaque near Paris was ripped off, thrown on the ground and covered with antisemitic writing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store