Имат и сателити кои не посматраат и на мочање кога одиме...Добро бе маме му ебам....немаше едни што ги викаа радари,подморници и едни торпеда....овие кого заебаваат![]()
Група од осум гусари ги примиле парите арно ама петорица од нив се удавиле...Ovie ke go papat kako im se naluteni ke ima 2-3 dnevna vojna ke go jadat toa piratite
more ke gi potepaat pred da bidat svesni za toa a taka im trebaБараат $35 милиони инакку ќе ги убијат киднапираните. Пртетходно им дигнаа јахта на французите, па мораше француските специјални сили да ги ослободуваат пленетите туристи. Јака пиратска мрежа е оформена во водите кај Сомалија.
Но сега им се нас’скаа и Пентагон, плус Русија и Украина, која пратила брод да ја разгледа ситуацијата. Мислам ќе ги потепаат тивко, барем така изгледа.
Германски танкер пленет денес, 13 киднапирани.Ова ти се вика квалитетно оживување на стар занает. Браво за баткиве. :tv:
Ова ме заинтересира.Нов ривалитет на истокот.February 04, 2009 12:21 IST
In the first military stand-off between the two Asian giants since 1986, an Indian submarine and two Chinese warships came close to a confrontation in the Bab Al-Mandab Strait, but the situation was resolved when the submarine left the site, the South China Morning Post reported on Wednesday. The Bab Al-Mandab Strait separates Yemen and Djibouti at the western end of the Gulf of Aden.
Though both the Indian and Chinese governments refused to comment on the matter, the report claimed that on January 15, the two warships, which had been deployed to fight Somali pirates, were followed by the submarine.
The warships forced the submarine to surface after several rounds of manoeuvring, the Hongkong-based newspaper said, adding that the submarine chose to end the stand-off and leave the spot.
The stand-off was triggered after the Chinese warships detected the presence of a submarine on their sonar, the report stated. The vessel reportedly fitted the description of submarines belonging to the Indian Navy.
When the submarine tried to jam the warships' sonar system, the Chinese navy sent an anti-submarine helicopter to track it, stated the report.
The newspaper claimed that the submarine had been following the warships since they entered the Indian Ocean. The escalating situation prompted the Chinese naval officials to keep its anti-submarine torpedoes ready.
The Indian submarine was reportedly trying to obtain crucial naval data from China's two most advanced warships, claimed the South China Morning Post.
An Indian Nevy spokesperson told rediff.com that such an incident did happen but denied that an Indian submarine was involved.
http://www.defpro.com/daily/details/239/MV Faina loadad with weapons was seized in September 2008. 11:19 GMT, February 5, 2009 Somali pirates have released an Ukrainian ship loaded with weapons including tanks, after a ransom was paid; reports from Somali coastal town of Harardheere, central Somalia and officials say.
Small speedboats were on Thursday ferrying the three dozen pirates back to shore after they spent the night counting their bounty on-board the MV Faina, seized in September with a cargo of weapons destined for the Kenyan port of Mombasa.
Pirates had been initially demanding a ransom of $ 20 million, but reports suggest that a figure of $3.2 million was agreed.
"The ransom has been delivered to the Faina. The owners of the ship so far don't want to comment on this, but I'm getting information on this just about every half-hour," Mikhail Voitenko, spokesman for the ship's owners, said in comments on Russian television on Wednesday.
“A pile of pirates are counting the haul on the Faina. I hope that nothing will be disrupted and the sailors will soon be able to disembark,” Voitenko added.
It is believed that the ransom was parachuted onto the ship's deck late on Wednesday.
The ship was loaded with 33 Soviet-era T72 tanks, rocket launchers, ammunition and other weaponry which were to be offloaded in Kenya and are suspected of being destined for the semi-autonomous government of South Sudan. Kenya has said the shipment is for its own armed services.
Somali pirates have captured three boats so far in 2009, after taking a record 42 last year in the busy Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean shipping lanes. Anarchy and an Islamist insurgency onshore have fuelled the upsurge of piracy.
A number of warships from foreign navies had been diverted to the area to monitor the situation, in part to ensure that the cargo of weaponry did not get into the hands of Somali insurgents.
Somalia does not have a Coast Guard or Navy because it has not had a functioning government since warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. They then turned on each other, reducing Somalia to anarchy and chaos.