Malaysia Closing Down on Tanker Hijacking Mastermind

Malaysian authorities are close to identifying a person who planned the hijacking of the oil tanker MT Orkim Harmony, local media reported the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency’s deputy-director general Datuk Ahmad Puzi Ab Kahar as saying.

The list of the so-called ”masterminds” behind the hijacking has been narrowed down to one name, Ahmad Puzi said.

Ahmad Puzi did not dismiss the possibility that the same person was behind six previous hijackings in Malaysian waters this year. However, there was not enough evidence to link the hijackings, Ahmad Puzi said.

The MMEA hopes to get additional information on the case from the eight Indonesian nationals who were arrested in Vietnam waters earlier this week, and have reportedly confessed to hijacking the Orkim Harmony on June 11.

Ahmad Puzi also said that the hijackers used satellite communication during the incident, which helped the investigators ”extract valuable information.”

Malaysia’s Foreign Ministry is currently negotiating with Vietnam to extradite the eight suspects on the grounds that the hijacking happened in Malaysian waters and on a Malaysia-flagged ship.

MT Orkim Harmony went missing 17 nautical miles southwest of Pulau Aur on June 11. The tanker’s crew members included 16 Indonesians, Malaysians, and Myanmar nationals.

Royal Malaysian Navy recovered the tanker eight days later. All 22 crew were reported safe and unharmed except the cook, an Indonesian national, who suffered a gunshot injury to his thigh.

World Maritime News Staff