Vietnamese abducted fishermen return home

Three Vietnamese fishermen held hostage by Somali pirates for more than four years returned home to a tumultuous reception in Hanoi on October 24th.
October 26, 2016 | 16:53

Three Vietnamese fishermen held hostage by Somali pirates for more than four years returned home to a tumultuous reception in Hanoi on October 24th.

After years of living in miserable conditions, Nguyen Van Ha and Nguyen Van Xuan, both 35, and Phan Xuan Phuong, 27, were greeted by overwhelmingly happy relatives and friends at the Noi Bai International Airport.

Vietnamese abducted fishermen return home

Nguyen Van Ha, one of the three abducted fishermen is overwhelmed with happiness meeting his family at the Noi Bai International Airport. (Photo: VNA/VNS)

Ha was in tears as he said he was both “moved and excited” on seeing loved ones that he had yearned to see for such a long time. He thanked everyone who’d helped make the return and reunion possible.

Bui Thi Le, Ha’s wife, said the family had heard on TV on October 22nd that the fishermen would be returning, and received a call from him the same night, saying he was staying in a hotel in Somalia and would be returning home on October 25th.

She kept crying as she waited for her husband at the airport exit gate, their son in her hands. Her mother said this was the first time the son was seeing his father because he was born on the same day that Ha left for his offshore fishing trip.

Do Tuan Anh, an official with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said his colleagues at the Vietnamese Embassy in Tanzania and other officials from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime had worked hard through days and nights for more than two weeks to help the fishermen get the documents needed for their return.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs had ordered the embassy in Tanzania to send its staff to Kenya shortly after receiving information that the 26 crew members of ship Naham 3, including three Vietnamese citizens, were to be freed and sent to Kenya.

Phiên bản di động