Attack on Spanish oiler Patiño

On 12 January 2012 Somali pirates attacked the Spanish Navy replenishment oiler Patiño after mistaking her for a large merchant ship. The pirate skiff hit Patiño with automatic fire before being repelled, damaged by return fire and captured after a brief chase by the vessel's helicopter. The encounter took place off the coast of Somalia and ended with the death of one pirate and the capture of six others.

Attack on Patiño
Part of Operation Atalanta

Spanish replenishment oiler Patiño
Date12 January 2012; 12 years ago (2012-01-12)
Location
Result Spanish victory
Belligerents
Spain Somali pirates
Casualties and losses
None 1 killed
6 captured
1 skiff captured

Action

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Patiño had been deployed on the Indian Ocean for her second tour as part of Operation Atalanta since November 2011, when she departed from her home port of Ferrol.[1] Patiño was the flagship of the EU naval forces in Somali waters.[2]

At 03:30, on 12 January 2012, while at anchor after escorting a World Food Programme ship with humanitarian aid to Mogadishu, Somalia,[3][4] a sentry aboard the Spanish vessel gave the alert when he spotted a skiff alongside Patiño's hull, with the obvious intention of boarding the ship. The skiff was manned by seven individuals, who opened fire on the Spanish unit with AK-47 rifles.[5] The pirates apparently mistook the warship for a freighter.[6] Patiño was hit on her hull and funnel[7] by 50 rounds in the ensuing gunbattle, which lasted up to two minutes.[6] The Spanish vessel returned fire with her light armament, but when the pirates continued the aggression, the Spanish sailors proceeded to "neutralize" the threat with what the Spanish Ministry of Defence described as "self-defense fire",[8] which forced the skiff to flee.[7]

The motor boat was then chased by one of Patiño's SH-3 Sea King helicopters for 3,000 yards (2,700 m), warned by megaphone and eventually stopped after a last burst across her bows from the helicopter's machine gun. During the pursuit the attackers threw overboard three ladders, two bags and seven rifles. The Spanish personnel captured six men of whom five were wounded, three of them seriously. The pirates declared that a seventh member of the crew was killed in the exchange of fire and that his dead body fell to the sea.[9][10] The skiff, damaged by gunfire, was confiscated by the Spanish authority.[7]

Aftermath

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Eloy Velasco, the judge in charge of the Audiencia Nacional of Spain ordered the arrested men taken to Spain for questioning under charges of piracy, possession of illegal weapons, damage to government property, and assault on members of the security forces. Velasco considered that the attack in international waters came under Spanish jurisdiction since the assault was carried out against Spanish citizens and no current agreement with a third country prevented a Spanish trial.[10]

An alternative trial location had been Kenya, following a May 2009 arrangement with the European Union granting Kenyan jurisdiction over acts of piracy committed in the Indian Ocean. However, in 2010 Kenya's High Court had ruled that the Kenyan government should put on trial only those subjects captured inside its territorial waters. This was overturned by the Kenyan Court of Appeal in October 2012, by which time the Spanish trial for Patiño's pirates had already commenced.[11] During their trial in Spain, all six men pleaded not guilty, claiming they were fishermen who had approached Patiño for assistance at sea.[12]

In October 2013 the men were convicted of attempted piracy by a Spanish Court and sentenced to eight years in jail. One man, Hamoud Elfaf Mahou, received an additional four-and-a-half-year term after also being convicted of belonging to an identified criminal organization.[12] In April 2014 the prosecution successfully appealed the length of sentences, arguing that the piracy constituted an actual rather than attempted attack on the ship. An additional five years was added to each sentence, extending them to between thirteen and seventeen and a half years.[13]

References

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  1. ^ Salgado, Raúl (21 November 2011). "El buque 'Patiño' abandona Ferrol para incorporarse a la operación 'Atalanta´". El Mundo (in Spanish).
  2. ^ "Pirates Attack EU NAVFOR Flagship". Oceanus. 13 January 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  3. ^ "El buque de la Armada volvía de un servicio de escolta para el Programa Mundial de Alimentos cuando fue atacado". Europa Press (in Spanish). 12 January 2011.
  4. ^ Bockmann, Michelle Wiese (13 January 2012). "EU Navy Has Gunfire Exchange With Somali Pirates". Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on 20 July 2012.
  5. ^ Vellón, A.; Fariñas, Julio Á. (14 January 2012). "El "Patiño" cumplió las normas de la UE para repeler el ataque pirata". La Voz de Galicia (in Spanish).
  6. ^ a b Pirates attack Spanish navy ship off Somalia, prompting gunbattle and helicopter chase Associated Press, 12 January 2012
  7. ^ a b c "Seis piratas detenidos y uno muerto tras intentar atacar un buque de la Armada". La Region, Vigo (in Spanish). 12 January 2012.
  8. ^ "Confundir con un mercante al buque de la Armada española Patiño explicaría el absurdo ataque del esquife de piratas". Defensa.com (in Spanish). 13 January 2012.
  9. ^ Villarejo, Esteban (13 January 2012). "Creyeron que era un barco mercante". ABC (in Spanish).
  10. ^ a b "La Audiencia Nacional ordena encarcelar y traer a España a los piratas somalíes que atacaron el Patiño". Euro-Press (in Spanish). 13 January 2012.
  11. ^ "Kenya can try Somali pirates, appeal court says". Associated Press. 18 October 2012. Archived from the original on 15 October 2013.
  12. ^ a b "Somali pirates convicted of attacking Spanish warship". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 30 October 2013. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  13. ^ "Spanish court lengthens jail sentence for pirates". Oman Observer. Oman Establishment for Press, Publication and Advertising. 14 April 2014. Archived from the original on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 19 July 2014.