Military Wiki
Action of 19 May 2009
Part of Operation Atalanta
K12
Image of the HSwMS Malmö (P12) of the Swedish Navy, taken 28 days after the incident.
DateMay 19, 2009
LocationGulf of Aden
Result Greco-Swedish victory
Belligerents
Somali Pirates
Commanders and leaders
Naval Ensign of Sweden Magnus Jönsson Unknown
Units involved
Naval Ensign of Sweden HSwMS Malmö
Greece M/V Antonis
Unknown
Strength
1 ship
At least 7 soldiers
2 boats
At least 7 pirates
Casualties and losses
None 7 Pirates captured
2 guns captured

The Action of 19 May 2009 was a confrontation between the HSwMS Malmö of the Swedish Navy and Somali Pirates in the Gulf of Aden after the pirates attempted to seize a Greek cargo vessel. The commander of the HSwMS Malmö was Magnus Jönsson.[1][2]

Background[]

Shortly before 1.30 AM on May 19, 2009, the HSwMS Malmo and HSwMS Stockholm[3] were ordered to respond to a mayday signal sent out by the Greek cargo ship M/V Antonis, the crew of the cargo ship had said that they came under rocket-propelled grenade fire from the pirates.[4][5]

Action[]

When the HSwMS Malmö arrived, the crew saw the pirates attempting to board the cargo ship, upon which it fired warning shots with cannons, machine guns, and snipers in an attempt to thwart the attack.[4][6] In response, the pirates reportedly fired a grenade launcher, but spokesman Anders Grenstad claimed nobody was injured.[7]

When the pirates attempted to escape, the HSwMS Malmö began chasing them, and focusing on one of their boats. After about 20 minutes the pirates gave up and a Swedish crew of around 7 soldiers[8] was sent to arrest them.[6][4][1]

The 7 pirates on board one of the fishing boats were arrested and taken onboard the HSwMS Malmö while security forces boarded the fishing boat and documented the items, finding 2 guns, a GPS navigator, and a grappling hook.[4][7][1]

Aftermath[]

The pirates were later taken to Djibouti where an agreement between the EU and Kenya was signed where pirates arrested by EU forces are taken to Kenya to face trial.[4][5][9] After the Swedes interrupted the attempted hijacking, there were fewer pirate attacks in the area, making Magnus Jönsson to say that he believed the Swedish intervention had some impact.[2]

References[]

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The original article can be found at Action of 19 May 2009 and the edit history here.