HA NOI, Vietnam – Vo Thi Nhi, 46, sat anxiously nibbling a few pieces of bread for lunch as she waited patiently inside Noi Bai International Airport for the flight bringing her son back home.
Luu Dinh Hung was one of 12 sailors working on a Taiwanese cargo ship that was attacked by Somali pirates two years ago.
"The thought of pirates pointing the gun at my son made me shiver," she said. "Our family listened to the news every day, but we couldn't get any information at all about our son."
Amid the desperation, the family, from Nghi Loc in Nghe An Province, received two phone calls from Hung. This gave them a glimpse of his situation. He was locked up on an island, fed only occasionally and often threatened with death.
The 12 Vietnamese were working on the Taiwanese vessel Xu Fu No. 1 when it was attacked by Somali pirates on December 31, 2010.
Source: VNS
Luu Dinh Hung was one of 12 sailors working on a Taiwanese cargo ship that was attacked by Somali pirates two years ago.
"The thought of pirates pointing the gun at my son made me shiver," she said. "Our family listened to the news every day, but we couldn't get any information at all about our son."
Amid the desperation, the family, from Nghi Loc in Nghe An Province, received two phone calls from Hung. This gave them a glimpse of his situation. He was locked up on an island, fed only occasionally and often threatened with death.
- On Saturday, Nhi received a call from her son and the news that the sailors were about to return home.
- Hung and 11 other Vietnamese fishermen landed in Ha Noi yesterday and were greeted with an outpouring of happiness from family members. The media went into a frenzy over the details of their 19-month ordeal.
- Nguyen Van Tam from Ky Anh, Ha Tinh, recalled that the 12 were provided with a total of three to four kilos of rice a day, but it had to be cooked in sparse supplies of extremely dirty water.
- "We didn't have clean water and could only take a bath every two to three months. Now all of us have skin problems," Tam said.
- His eyes still show the horror of the months in captivation. "All of us were beaten and some had guns pointed at their heads," he said.
- According to the sailors, as part of the arranged rescue on July, 17 the pirates dropped them on the beach several kilometres from the hide-out of the pirates, who feared an attack.
- As had been planned, a Chinese naval ship picked them up and took them to Dar Es Salaam in Tanzania.
The 12 Vietnamese were working on the Taiwanese vessel Xu Fu No. 1 when it was attacked by Somali pirates on December 31, 2010.
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