30boat
N/A
For being there in the first place?
I feel for them but were they?
I feel for them but were they?
Perhaps, or Perhaps Not:
It depends on which 'norms' of responsibility you subscribe to.
They are intelligent, self-sufficient adults capable of researching the background to their intended adventure, assessing the extent of the precautions they needed to take, preparing for the eventualities they could forsee or imagine, etc.
- Just the same as the rest of us who choose to live life rather than lead a cocooned existence.
They got it wrong and they face the consequences of the risk they took.
In exactly the same way as a mountaineer faces the consequences of a wrong risk-assessment of avalanche or rock-fall (I've done both, and lived).
- Or the chance of arriving off a rugged but navigable lee-shore in a snowstorm instead of the expected good visibility: done that too!
In my book, we who voluntarily accept a slight risk, say 200-to-one, of an identified risk going against us should not expect too much from the rest of the world if the one-in-200 happens. It was our choice, and our necks.
This particular hazard the Chandlers faced was of course human, not natural; but so is street mugging, death by someone else's dangerous driving, or a terrorist bomb.
On the one hand we moan about the 'Nanny State' trying to inhibit out natural risk-taking; then like to have a different moan that something dreadful was allowed to happen!
We should all take a great deal more personal responsibility, and bite the lip when we lose out, or have to see others lose out when we cannot realistically help.
Help by paying the ransom demand, and encourage more? Only if we are prepared to have our government announce exclusion-zones for British yachtsmen with the clear declaration that if you enter one of them you forfeit your rights as a British national.
The situation has seriously deteriorated in the Seychelles archipelago during the last three weeks.
According to the EU coordination, the Seychelles are surrounded in a 150NM radius around Victoria in ALL directions. Somali mother-ships are pre-positioned North, South, East and West. The latest reported attacks were in the NE one day ago (Tuesday 5 May).
There is no longer any 100% safe exit/entry route. Several boats underway from the Chagos have already altered their course to Mauritius. More than 20 boats planning to sail to Madagascar and Mayotte have cancelled their passage.
On Monday afternoon (4 May) a mother ship and two skiffs were arrested by the Seychelles Navy near Marianne island, 35NM south-east of Victoria! Our own boat and another vessel doing a 90 degree route last Thursday was informed by the navy that one incident took place 50NM ahead of us. We decided to return to Mahe to assess the situation. The next morning, not only one attack were confirmed but two.
Apparently the mother-ships have ventured too far East because of the very quiet sea and have decided to operate far beyond their usual 400NM radius from the Somali coast. According to military inetlligence the pirates on their skiffs are abandonned on the high sea by the mother ships with one mission: catch a boat, this is your return ticket...
For being there in the first place?
I feel for them but were they?
. . Both of them being in bed with no-one keeping watch...that's irresponsible.
For being there in the first place?
I feel for them but were they?
I would suggest that sailing (cruising) yachts cannot out run a powered pirate vessel even if you saw it a good distance off.
Not maintaining a lookout is irresponsible. Period. But if they saw the pirates, they could have called for help and evaded for as long as they could.
Called for help? There was a ship with a military helicopter, 30mm cannon and 70 marines standing off - who should they have called? It is a fantasy to think that a middle aged couple can do anything at all to evade a bunch of fit young armed thugs with powerful engines.