A tanker carrying petrol destined for Cape Town remains under the control of Somali pirates following a boarding incident off the coast of Somalia. Maritime security experts have confirmed that the vessel, identified as the Malta-flagged Hellas Aphrodite, was approached and seized by armed assailants on Thursday, with the crew seeking refuge in a secure compartment while maintaining navigational authority over the ship. As reported by Reuters, the attack occurred in waters increasingly vulnerable to piracy, prompting heightened alerts for shipping routes in the region.
The European Union’s naval contingent has deployed a warship to the vicinity, anticipated to reach the site on Friday to coordinate a response. It is not yet clear whether the intruders continue to occupy the tanker, but initial accounts suggest the crew of twenty-four remains unharmed. The incident unfolded near the location of a subsequent attempted assault on Friday involving a liquefied natural gas carrier, the Marshall Islands-flagged Al Thumama, which managed to evade a pursuing speedboat carrying three individuals. According to Maritime Executive, the Al Thumama, travelling from Qatar to Poland via the Cape of Good Hope, reported the approach but successfully outmanoeuvred the threat.
This episode marks a resurgence in Somali piracy, which had diminished significantly in recent years due to concerted international naval patrols and operations against land-based strongholds. Once a dominant hazard in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean, pirate activities have re-emerged amid diversions of shipping traffic southward along East Africa’s coastline. These reroutes stem from ongoing threats in the Red Sea posed by Yemen’s Houthi militants, who initiated attacks on commercial vessels in November 2023 in support of Palestinian causes amid regional conflicts. As detailed by Al Arabiya, many operators have opted to avoid the Red Sea, inadvertently exposing vessels to Somali gangs seeking opportunistic strikes.
The Hellas Aphrodite was en route with a cargo of petrol bound for South Africa when targeted. Security analysts attribute the pirates’ boldness to the increased presence of rerouted ships, creating fertile ground for hijackings. In a related development, the last confirmed pirate boarding prior to this occurred in May 2024, involving the Liberian-flagged Basilisk approximately 380 nautical miles east of Somalia. The operator of the Al Thumama, Japan’s NYK LNG Shipmanagement, has refrained from commentary on the evasion incident.
Concerns over maritime safety have intensified, with experts warning of potential escalations if not addressed swiftly. The international community, including forces from the European Union and other coalitions, continues to monitor the area closely. As noted by WTOP News, this spate of attacks revives fears for global trade lanes critical to energy and commodity transport, urging renewed collaborative efforts to secure these vital waterways. The ongoing situation underscores the fragile balance in regional security, where geopolitical tensions indirectly fuel opportunistic criminal activities at sea.

