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Pirate Legend
Ahoy ye fellow Gentleman of fortune! I figure instead of using valuable forum space to keep ye informed of all the daring do of those real life bilge rats! I would post all me findings in one easy to find locale! So ye always be a knowing were to look for the latest piratey scuttlebutt!
This here first article is just a we bit aged and moldy and ye all may have heard it before, but it tugged at me heart strings like a good ol' shanty! It be about the good ol' Caribbean! The setting be the waters of the Windward Islands, off the coast of St. Vincent and The Grenadines!
<!--quoteo--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec--><b>Yachts encountering real pirates of the Caribbean</b>
Robberies have increased as the number of boats sailing the lush islands grows, and with it the lure of the sailors' valuables.
By Carol J. Williams, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
June 1, 2008
CHATEAUBELAIR, ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES -- When two men wielding cutlasses and a third brandishing a gun burst onto their yacht at 1:30 in the morning, Allison Botros and the seven others aboard suddenly realized that "Pirates of the Caribbean" is not just a movie.
"Give us your money or we will kill you," Botros recalled the robbers telling them during the 15-minute ordeal. The mother of three from Cleveland was cruising with Swedish and American friends aboard the 70-foot Sway, which was boarded as it was anchored in this pristine harbor that is shadowed by the La Soufriere volcano and rimmed by swaying palms. After shaking down the passengers for thousands of dollars in cash, watches, cameras and cellphones, the robbers ordered skipper Harald Krecker to motor out to sea or be hit with rocket-propelled grenades.
More than five months after the Dec. 22 incident, the robbery victims have yet to receive a police report, the pirates remain at large, and the sleek yachts that ply the teal waters of the Windward Islands have gone elsewhere, making a ghost town of scenic Chateaubelair.
Attacks on yachters across the Caribbean have marred the luxurious cruising life with increasing frequency as the number of vessels sailing the lush islands grows year to year, and with it the lure of valuables for thieves and drug traffickers in the region.
At least three other attacks were reported in Chateaubelair in a two-week period in December, all involving three men, two long knives and a handgun.
"What is new in the last two to three years is an increase in the use of weapons," said Melodye Pompa, administrator of the Caribbean Safety and Security Net website, a sailing community endeavor that logs thefts, robberies and assaults committed against boaters. "It's becoming more violent. I've tracked that across the region we cover."
Most of the hundreds of incidents collected from 30 countries and territories over the last four years involve dinghy and outboard motor thefts or burglaries of boats while passengers were ashore. But guns and knives are being used more frequently, and dozens of incidents involving beatings and stabbings are among the crimes reported to the website, which compiles its statistics from charter operators, marinas, harbor masters and the victims.
No one on board the Sway was hurt, but the captain of another yacht, the Chiquita, which was attacked here the next night, suffered multiple cuts, including two head wounds that required stitches at a hospital in Kingstown, the island nation's capital.
"There are times when it's happening and you think it's not real," Botros said. "At one point one of them said, 'If you don't find your wallet, I'll kill you,' and I was so traumatized I forgot that I hadn't brought my wallet on the trip. I was saying, 'Oh my God, I can't find it! I've got to find it!' thinking about our kids at home."<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Rest of the story is here :
<a href="http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-pirates1-2008jun01,0,5483405.story" target="_blank">http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/a...0,5483405.story</a>
Caribbean Safety and Security Net News website
<a href="http://safetyandsecuritynet.com/NEWS.html" target="_blank">http://safetyandsecuritynet.com/NEWS.html</a>
This here first article is just a we bit aged and moldy and ye all may have heard it before, but it tugged at me heart strings like a good ol' shanty! It be about the good ol' Caribbean! The setting be the waters of the Windward Islands, off the coast of St. Vincent and The Grenadines!
<!--quoteo--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec--><b>Yachts encountering real pirates of the Caribbean</b>
Robberies have increased as the number of boats sailing the lush islands grows, and with it the lure of the sailors' valuables.
By Carol J. Williams, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
June 1, 2008
CHATEAUBELAIR, ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES -- When two men wielding cutlasses and a third brandishing a gun burst onto their yacht at 1:30 in the morning, Allison Botros and the seven others aboard suddenly realized that "Pirates of the Caribbean" is not just a movie.
"Give us your money or we will kill you," Botros recalled the robbers telling them during the 15-minute ordeal. The mother of three from Cleveland was cruising with Swedish and American friends aboard the 70-foot Sway, which was boarded as it was anchored in this pristine harbor that is shadowed by the La Soufriere volcano and rimmed by swaying palms. After shaking down the passengers for thousands of dollars in cash, watches, cameras and cellphones, the robbers ordered skipper Harald Krecker to motor out to sea or be hit with rocket-propelled grenades.
More than five months after the Dec. 22 incident, the robbery victims have yet to receive a police report, the pirates remain at large, and the sleek yachts that ply the teal waters of the Windward Islands have gone elsewhere, making a ghost town of scenic Chateaubelair.
Attacks on yachters across the Caribbean have marred the luxurious cruising life with increasing frequency as the number of vessels sailing the lush islands grows year to year, and with it the lure of valuables for thieves and drug traffickers in the region.
At least three other attacks were reported in Chateaubelair in a two-week period in December, all involving three men, two long knives and a handgun.
"What is new in the last two to three years is an increase in the use of weapons," said Melodye Pompa, administrator of the Caribbean Safety and Security Net website, a sailing community endeavor that logs thefts, robberies and assaults committed against boaters. "It's becoming more violent. I've tracked that across the region we cover."
Most of the hundreds of incidents collected from 30 countries and territories over the last four years involve dinghy and outboard motor thefts or burglaries of boats while passengers were ashore. But guns and knives are being used more frequently, and dozens of incidents involving beatings and stabbings are among the crimes reported to the website, which compiles its statistics from charter operators, marinas, harbor masters and the victims.
No one on board the Sway was hurt, but the captain of another yacht, the Chiquita, which was attacked here the next night, suffered multiple cuts, including two head wounds that required stitches at a hospital in Kingstown, the island nation's capital.
"There are times when it's happening and you think it's not real," Botros said. "At one point one of them said, 'If you don't find your wallet, I'll kill you,' and I was so traumatized I forgot that I hadn't brought my wallet on the trip. I was saying, 'Oh my God, I can't find it! I've got to find it!' thinking about our kids at home."<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Rest of the story is here :
<a href="http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-pirates1-2008jun01,0,5483405.story" target="_blank">http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/a...0,5483405.story</a>
Caribbean Safety and Security Net News website
<a href="http://safetyandsecuritynet.com/NEWS.html" target="_blank">http://safetyandsecuritynet.com/NEWS.html</a>