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Home / World

Captain of Turkish tanker feared death in migrant hijack in Mediterranean Sea

By Maggie Michael, Vanessa Gera, Stephen Calleja
Other·
29 Mar, 2019 10:53 PM5 mins to read

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Malta armed forces onboard the Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1. The captain was detained on suspicion of being a human trafficker. Photo / AP

Malta armed forces onboard the Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1. The captain was detained on suspicion of being a human trafficker. Photo / AP

African migrants who hijacked an oil tanker after it rescued them in the Mediterranean Sea seized metal objects and began smashing the ship and threatening crew members after they realized they were being returned to Libya, the ship's captain said Friday.

Nader el-Hiblu, the 42-year-old Libyan captain of the El Hiblu 1 ship, said he and five other crew members feared they could be killed during the "horror" that played out at sea this week. He said the threats by rioting migrants forced him to agree to their demand that he take them to Europe, not back to Libya.

Armed forces stand onboard the Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1, which was hijacked after the captain had been directed to pick up the migrants. Photo / AP
Armed forces stand onboard the Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1, which was hijacked after the captain had been directed to pick up the migrants. Photo / AP

"They attacked the cockpit, heavily beating on the doors and the windows and they threatened to smash the boat," Hiblu said in an exclusive account given Friday to The Associated Press. He spoke by phone from the ship, which is now docked in Valletta, the capital of Malta.

"They went nuts and they were screaming and shouting 'Go back! Go back! Go back!'" he said.

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For years, the Mediterranean Sea has been a place of drama and death as desperate people from Africa and the Middle East board unseaworthy smuggling boats with dreams of a better life in Europe. Last year, 2299 people died in the sea trying to head to Europe, and the dangerous journey has also killed 311 people so far this year.

The migrants revolted against heading back to lawless Libya, where aid groups say migrants are beaten, raped and tortured on a regular basis in detention camps. Some aid groups called the migrants actions "self-defense" against Europe's inhumane migration policies.

Now, there are fears that some merchant ship captains might become reluctant to save migrants from sinking boats in the future if they fear they could lose control of their ships.

Migrants are disembarked from Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1, which was hijacked by migrants in the Mediterranean. Photo / AP
Migrants are disembarked from Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1, which was hijacked by migrants in the Mediterranean. Photo / AP

El-Hiblu said the drama began Tuesday afternoon when his tanker was travelling from Istanbul to Libya. He was contacted by a military aircraft flying above — though he isn't sure if it was Maltese or Italian — alerting him of a boat with people who needed help.

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He then approached the boat, which he said was carrying 98 men, women and children.

"I took the people in the boat and there were six who refused to jump in, fearing that I take them back to Libya," he said. "They refused to come with me and they fled while the plane was going after them."

The aircraft then contacted him with a second location and he went there, but lost contact with the plane and the boats, he said.

He then directed his ship to Libya, saying the migrants believed they were headed to Europe and "were relaxed and happy and did nothing throughout the journey."

At 6am on Wednesday, el-Hiblu alerted Libyan port authorities that he was nearing the coast and requested assistance from coast guards or naval forces, aware that the migrants would become upset at realising they were returning to Libya.

But help didn't come. When the Libyan capital of Tripoli came into view, about 25 of the male migrants began their attack, he said.

"They all brought heavy metal tools and started to beat and smash the ship and threatened that they would leave the ship in pieces" if the vessel continued to Libya, he said. "It was horror. I didn't care much about the boat, but the crew members."

El-Hiblu called the port in Libya again and told them the crew was heading north toward Europe, saying: "they are going to kill me and kill us if we return. We are leaving."

Libyan Coast Guard Spokesman Brig. Gen. Ayoub Gassim said when Libyan coast guards learned about the hijacking, they sent two boats in "hot pursuit" over a distance of 60 nautical miles (110 kilometres), but said the tanker was faster than their boats.

El-Hiblu insists, however, that the Libyan coast guard could have reached his tanker had authorities wanted to.

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Armed forces stand onboard the Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1 in Valletta, Malta. Photo / AP
Armed forces stand onboard the Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1 in Valletta, Malta. Photo / AP

As the tanker moved north, news started spreading it was heading either toward Malta or the Italian island of Lampedusa. Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, who has a strong anti-migrant stance, said Italy would not accept them.

At first, Malta also insisted it would not accept the vessel in its waters.

But on Thursday morning, the Maltese armed forces stormed the vessel and detained five men suspected of leading the hijacking, taking them away in handcuffs when the ship docked in Valletta, the capital.

El-Hiblu was incensed, however, after a Maltese security officer gave him a rough treatment, ordering him to take off his clothes for a body search and confiscating his phone. He said he was detained him for a couple of hours in a cell in a police station near the port, under suspicions that he was a human trafficker.

"This filthy country treated me in a very disrespectable way after rescuing 98 people. They dealt with me as a criminal and accused me of illegal migration," he said angrily.

Maltese officials would not comment on the tanker hijacking case as they carried out an investigation. It was also impossible to speak to any of the migrants who had been on the ship to hear their side of the story.

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- AP

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