'Arctic Sea' plot thickens

A ransom demand has been made for the lost merchant ship Arctic Sea, Finnish media said today, but the whereabouts of the vessel…

A ransom demand has been made for the lost merchant ship Arctic Sea, Finnish media said today, but the whereabouts of the vessel were still unknown in a saga looking increasingly like the plot of a spy thriller.

The report was the latest fragment of information to surface about the missing ship and its 15-member Russian crew, which has been cloaked in mystery since failing to deliver a $1.3-million cargo of timber to the Algerian port of Bejaia on August 4th.

"I don't sleep. I don't eat. I have been working 24 hours a day," said Viktor Matveyev, director of Solchart, the Finland-based operator of the vessel. "We hope that the crew is alive."

The vanishing of the Maltese-registered vessel and its crew has unsettled authorities in Europe and North Africa and explanations for its disappearance have included piracy, foul play or a secret cargo.

Moscow sent warships to find it and a Russian report said the ship was briefly identified off France's coast. Other reports have put it off Cape Verde.

Mikhail Boytenko, editor of Russia's respected Sovfrakht maritime journal, has said the ship may have been carrying a secret cargo unknown to the vessel's owners or operators.

"I don't think that it was pirates who took this vessel but it really smells of some sort of state involvement. This is real cloak and dagger stuff, like a le Carre novel," he said.

The Finnish news agency STT cited the National Bureau of Investigation (KRP) as saying a ransom demand had been made to Solchart but the KRP did not say who made the demand, how much it was for, or when it was delivered. No one at the bureau was available for comment.

Solchart's Matveyev declined to comment on any ransom demand and said his main focus was on trying to find the Arctic Sea, which the firm last had contact with off Portugal on August 1st.

A wave of piracy has hit shipping off Somalia, and an international naval force patrols its coast in an effort to protect merchant vessels. But a hijacking in European waters would be almost unprecedented in modern times.