Last month, we reported on the Indian Ocean Explorer and
how it was captured with crew on board (but no passengers) by Somali
pirates, and will probably be docked in Somalia for a few months.
After reading the story, reader David Hill (Hamilton, MA) e-mailed
us that he was on another liveaboard in the same area when the
Explorer was seized. Here’s his tale:
I was on board the Sea Bird in the Aldabra Group in early
April. We were diving Astove Island, 80 miles away from
Assumption Island, on the same day the Explorer was taken.
We were warned immediately. It was an interesting 24 hours
that followed.
We had to go back to Assumption Island the next day,
as that has the only airport in the Aldabras, and from there,
we were to fly back to Mahe. To make matters more interesting,
the Sea Bird is Israeli-owned, with the captain and the
engineer both Israelis who had no intention of surrendering meekly to Muslim pirates. We sailed at dark and made the
crossing overnight with the ship blacked out and double
watches standing.
At Assumption the next day, things got even wackier.
We passengers went ashore, along with the three female
crew members who were being evacuated on our plane. The
twin-engine Beechcraft was supposed to be bringing the next
set of divers for our ship but instead brought 12 Seychelles
army soldiers. When the pilot landed, he called to the fuel
shed and got no answer. Fearing the pirates had taken the
island, he taxied the plane to our end of the runway and out
came the soldiers, expecting a firefight instead of a group
of puzzled-looking divers. Some soldiers were to stay on
Assumption to guard the fuel depot while the rest were to
board the Sea Bird and escort it back to Mahe.
Our group apparently has the dubious distinction of
being the last to dive the Aldabra Group for some time, as
all dive trips there have been canceled. Anyway, the diving
was great, except for the alarming lack of sharks, which have
been heavily fished almost to extinction in the area.