AF-SOOMAALI

977 days held hostage by So­mali pi­rates


One af­ter­noon two years into my cap­tiv­ity, in a dirty villa, I sat up on the mat­tress and no­ticed that my guard had left the room. His ri­fle lay on a mat. I con­sid­ered grab­bing it.

The pi­rates were hold­ing me in Galka­cyo, a re­gional cap­i­tal in cen­tral So­ma­lia. They told me it was Harad­heere, near the coast, but I knew Harad­heere had no com­mer­cial air­port, and at first the pi­rates would gig­gle every time we heard pas­sen­ger planes take off and land.

I had seen the dull and dusty build­ings of Galka­cy­o’s air­port as a free man, and now the air­craft noise in­spired baroque dreams of free­dom – fan­tasies rang­ing from a quiet re­lease on the tar­mac to a clan­des­tine gath­er­ing of Black Hawks and com­man­dos in the dead of night.

My guard, Bashko, came in and no­ticed the gun. He picked it up by the muz­zle, nim­bly, and sat down with a bril­liant smile.

“Prob­lem!” he said, mean­ing the un­at­tended firearm.

He rested it be­hind him and munched a stem of khat, a leafy green plant that acts as a stim­u­lant. His eyes were fer­vid. I had just been won­der­ing how many of the guards I could shoot be­fore they shot me. I smiled. I was – or had been – a peace­ful man. I did­n’t want to kill him, or any­one. But I was go­ing nuts.

“Michael,” Bashko said with good hu­mour. “If the Amer­i­cans come, you will be killed.”

“I know.”

“Why no money?” he asked, re­fer­ring to the ran­som the pi­rates had de­manded.

I shrugged.

* * *
 Ad­ver­tise­ment

I flew to So­ma­lia in early 2012 to write about a pi­rate gang jailed in Ham­burg. They had been cap­tured two years ear­lier when they tried to hi­jack the MV Taipan, a Ger­man cargo ship, near So­ma­lia. Their marathon trial rep­re­sented the first pro­ceed­ing on Ger­man soil against any pi­rate, So­mali or oth­er­wise, in more than four cen­turies. I had re­ported on the case for Spiegel On­line, where I worked in Berlin, and it seemed to me that a book about the case and some un­der­re­ported as­pects of So­mali piracy might be in­ter­est­ing.

I trav­elled with Ash­win Ra­man, a In­dian-born film-maker, whose doc­u­men­taries about Afghanistan and So­ma­lia had won sev­eral awards. We had arranged se­cu­rity through Mo­hammed Sa­hal Ger­lach, a So­mali el­der, in Berlin. Ger­lach had lived much of his adult life in Ger­many, but he came from Galka­cyo, which had be­come a lat­ter-day pi­rate sup­ply town. Ger­lach had good re­la­tion­ships with the dom­i­nant Sa’ad clan el­ders in the re­gion. He had also guided a Ger­man TV cor­re­spon­dent through the same re­gion about eight months be­fore.

Dur­ing the trial in Ham­burg, some of the pub­lic de­fend­ers had in­sisted their clients were poor, sim­ple, press-ganged fish­er­men. The no­tion of So­mali pi­rates as frus­trated fish­er­men was a cliche, but it seemed to work in court, where lit­tle could be ver­i­fied about the men. When we ar­rived in So­ma­lia, we found this fish­ing story in com­mon cir­cu­la­tion. We heard it in Hobyo, a pi­rate nest on the east­ern coast where we trav­elled with a long con­voy of guards. As guests of Ger­lach and his Sa’ad clan, we in­ter­viewed a boss who called him­self Mustaf Mo­hammed Sheikh. He pre­ferred to keep his face wrapped in a kef­fiyeh and de­clared him­self to be at war with forces of the west. He said “white peo­ple” had at­tacked So­ma­lia by trawl­ing its coral reefs and dump­ing poi­son on its shores. Some com­plaints were le­git­i­mate – over­fish­ing and il­le­gal dump­ing are enor­mous prob­lems along the African coast – but pi­rates through­out his­tory have pig­gy­backed on ro­man­tic so­cial causes, and So­ma­lis were no ex­cep­tion.

“They just want to buy khat,” Ger­lach told me later. He was only half-jok­ing.

Af­ter 10 days in So­ma­lia we had al­most fin­ished our work. I needed to fin­ish gath­er­ing ma­te­r­ial, but Ash­win had noth­ing to do and wanted to leave early. It went against my gut in­stinct, but be­cause we had agreed to do every­thing to­gether, and be­cause it might not be safe for me to hide in the ho­tel by my­self, I went to see him off. The road to the air­port could be dan­ger­ous, so we talked to Ger­lach about se­cu­rity: two aid work­ers had been kid­napped there a few months be­fore.

Ger­lach as­sured us that we would be safe, and his friend, the re­gional pres­i­dent, sent a per­sonal car. A So­mali gun­man rode with us. But by then it was too late. We had been re­searched. I pieced this to­gether only months af­ter, when a pi­rate showed me an im­age of my own face on his phone. The pi­rates had pulled an au­thor photo of mine from an old New York Times in­ter­view. I’m a dual cit­i­zen, and I had trav­elled to So­ma­lia on a Ger­man pass­port; but they knew I was an Amer­i­can writer.

The first cold in­di­ca­tion of this scrutiny came at the air­port, while we sat around hav­ing tea. We had to wait for the ter­mi­nal to open. One of Ger­lach’s friends, Yassin, hap­pened to men­tion my name, and a young So­mali man glanced over from a table nearby.

“You are Michael Scott Moore?”

“Yes.”

“I have seen you on the in­ter­net,” he said. “You are fa­mous.”

“I am not,” I said, frown­ing.

Af­ter a long de­lay, Ger­lach and I shook hands with Ash­win be­side the airstrip and be­gan the drive back to our ho­tel. Along a dusty road, which cut be­tween the graves of So­ma­lis killed in the long civil war, a pickup truck mounted with a heavy gun was wait­ing.

The truck ap­proached with its can­non aimed at our wind­shield. A dozen or so men jumped off and swarmed to my car door. They fired into the air and tried to open the door. I held it shut, but they cracked my wrist with their Kalash­nikovs, pulled me out, and beat me on the head. Ger­lach was also beaten – but not kid­napped – and our gun­man in the pas­sen­ger seat never fired a shot. My glasses were bro­ken in the dust. My brain re­coiled from what was hap­pen­ing. Be­fore they fired their weapons I had con­vinced my­self they just wanted to see my pa­pers. While they dragged me to a wait­ing car I felt a re­flex­ive hor­ror for my fam­ily and the bur­den I was about to be­come. I wanted to rewind every­thing.

The truck ap­proached with its can­non aimed at our wind­shield. A dozen or so men jumped off and swarmed to my car door
We drove, first, to a house on the edge of Galka­cyo, where my bag was handed to an an­gry-look­ing man who waved us away. We sped out of town to the east, and I sat with ripped clothes and a bleed­ing scalp, squeezed into the back seat next to three surly gun­men, bounc­ing across the bush, for sev­eral hours.

“OK, OK,” the pi­rates in the front seat said to me. “No prob­lem.”

The car bounced over a bump so hard that my head hit the roof and left a blood­stain on the fab­ric.

“Fuck!” I said and pointed at the blood, cradling the bro­ken wrist in my lap.

At first I spoke mainly in ob­scen­i­ties.

“OK, OK,” they said.

* * *
Near sun­down we ar­rived at an out­door camp in a red­dish, sandy part of the bush. The pi­rates blind­folded me and led me to a foam mat­tress, which lay in the open be­side a crum­bling low cliff. I was dazed and blood­ied but aware of other So­mali gun­men, and other hostages. I saw very lit­tle. With­out my glasses I am dras­ti­cally near­sighted, and I spent my en­tire cap­tiv­ity, more than two and a half years, in a fuzzy state of near-blind­ness.

The guards handed me bread, a bot­tle of wa­ter and a can of tuna. That would be my diet for the next sev­eral months, along with oc­ca­sional cooked pasta or rice. In two months, I would lose about 40 pounds.

“OK Michael?” one of the guards said. He was an earnest young So­mali with a tur­ban and pale brown skin. He stood on a rise hold­ing a Kalash­nikov; the mar­bled sky be­hind him had thin swirls of red­den­ing cloud.

“No,” I said af­ter a while.

For some rea­son I thought about the things in my back­pack. My sense of self was still in­tact, like a man who’s just lost his head and wants to put it back on. “They took my bag,” I told the guard. “Can you ask some­one for my bag? It’s a ma­roon back­pack, it had a cam­era in it.”

“They steal your cam­era?”

“Yes.”

“Thieves!”

I looked at him cu­ri­ously. Af­ter a while I squinted at all the guards, one at a time, to see if I recog­nised any from our trip to Hobyo. They were not the same men. But if they were Sa’ad pi­rates, it did­n’t mat­ter. My hosts – mean­ing Ger­lach’s rel­a­tives – had turned on me.

The next morn­ing we moved to a house. The pi­rates stuffed two other hostages into the car with me and bound our hands. They were both in their 60s, one African, the other – I thought – a Pa­cific Is­lander. He had co­coa-coloured skin, small pierc­ing eyes, and twin furzes of gray hair stick­ing out over his ears. This was Rolly Tam­bara. We were about to be­come good friends.

We drove along the coast that morn­ing un­til we en­tered a half-wrecked, filthy house on the edge of a town. (Later I learned it was Hobyo.) We spent three nights there in sep­a­rate rooms. We sat on thin mat­tresses, free to walk around but not free to visit the toi­let stall with­out per­mis­sion.

A So­mali man who may have been a live­stock doc­tor came to in­spect my wrist. He de­clared it “not bro­ken,” al­though pieces of bone moved around un­der the skin. He sewed a thin wooden splint around the throb­bing joint and said it would heal in three weeks. (It took six.) Then I tried to sleep; but be­fore dawn Rolly and I were loaded into a Land Rover and dri­ven across the bush by pi­rates who seemed to be in a ner­vous panic.

We drove at ran­dom, for sev­eral hours, un­til dark fell. What I would­n’t learn for days was that a posse of Amer­i­can he­li­copters had res­cued the two aid work­ers cap­tured in Galka­cyo – Jes­sica Buchanan and Poul Thisted, an Amer­i­can and a Dane – from a pi­rate camp in a dis­tant part of the bush the pre­vi­ous night. Nine So­mali guards had been killed. The kid­nap­pers were dif­fer­ent from mine, but the pi­rate king­pin Mo­hammed Gar­fanji had fi­nanced both ab­duc­tions. He lost a rel­a­tive in the raid.

The So­ma­lis in the front of our Land Rover were ag­i­tated. One of them, who the men called Ahmed Dirie, had rot­ten teeth and brown, stained-look­ing eyes. He seemed to be our guards’ lieu­tenant – their most im­me­di­ate, low-rank­ing boss. His face looked half-melted with anger and he kept an am­mu­ni­tion belt strapped around his pot belly. He and his dri­ver, Muse, quizzed me while we drove across the desert bush.

“Are you a ma­rine gen­eral?” said Muse.

“Me? No.”

“Colonel?”

“No,” I said. “I’m a Ger­man cit­i­zen.”

“Ya, ya, ya,” said Ahmed Dirie.

They knew I was Amer­i­can, and they thought the Buchanan res­cue had some­thing to do with me. But I would not learn the full story for weeks. From what I un­der­stood of Muse’s So­mali, a dozen peo­ple had died in some dis­tant town.

“He­li­copters!” said Muse. “Amer­i­can!”

“Oh boy.”

We set­tled in a dusty wooded val­ley. The So­ma­lis let us sit freely, like kinder­garten­ers, on foam mat­tresses un­der a tree. The pi­rates had cut Rol­ly’s hair in Hobyo. Now he looked al­most dap­per, with a half-bald head and a tough, small, spark­plug frame.

On our first morn­ing in the val­ley, af­ter a break­fast of cold rice, Rolly started to talk. He was an old Catholic fish­er­man from the Sey­chelles. Pi­rates had caught him and his friend Marc three months ear­lier, in late 2011. They were clean­ing fish on Rol­ly’s boat about 50 miles from their home port when pi­rates ap­proached in a skiff un­der a crackle of gun­fire. The Sey­chelles’ main is­land of Mahé lies about 700 miles from So­ma­lia. Their trip to Hobyo, at gun­point, took seven days.

Rolly spoke a com­i­cal, French-in­flected Eng­lish. “When I go to fish­ing,” he told me, “I no like to eat fish. I bring chicken, saucis­sons, like that.” His boat had been equipped with a stove, and on his first morn­ing as a hostage he tried to cook pork sausage for break­fast. One of the So­ma­lis no­ticed. With his bare foot, from be­hind, the pi­rate kicked the sausage over­board. His Mus­lim sen­si­bil­i­ties were of­fended by pork sausage. Rolly still could­n’t be­lieve it. “They catch you and take you from your home,” he said. “And then they no like what you eat.”

A view of Hobyo as Michael Scott Moore visited in January 2012
A view of Hobyo as Michael Scott Moore and
Ashwin Raman visited, with armed guard, in January 2012 Photograph: Ashwin Raman

The pi­rates had also glanced at the name printed on the rear of Rol­ly’s boat – Aride, Port Vic­to­ria – and de­clared him “Aus­tralian”. They thought that he was too light-skinned to be African. In fact he was one-quar­ter Chi­nese. “Sey­chelles, you know, is an is­land coun­try,” he said. “We are mixed, mixed, mixed.”

Ran­som for the two men was $20m. Rol­ly’s mind seemed to churn through the same trenches of thought every day, and while we lay un­der thorn trees in the bush he would wince while he made com­pli­cated cal­cu­la­tions.

“Michael,” he would say. “You know how much is $20m my coun­try? Is a lot of money. You can buy house, you can buy car.”

“Rolly, with $20m you can found a cor­po­ra­tion.”

“Heh-heh,” he would say.

* * *

The night­time raid by US Navy Seals had res­cued Buchanan and Thisted in open sa­van­nah, at night, but the So­ma­lis kept us out­doors in the weeks and months that fol­lowed. They boasted on the phone to jour­nal­ists but took no se­ri­ous pre­cau­tions, apart from hid­ing us un­der some trees. “Hold­ing the hostages in one place is un­likely now be­cause we are the next tar­get,” a pi­rate spokesman told the As­so­ci­ated Press in late Jan­u­ary – but once we had set­tled in the wooded val­ley, Rolly and I spent weeks there, even af­ter a tree­top-stir­ring sur­veil­lance flight by an enor­mous plane (prob­a­bly an Amer­i­can P-3 Orion).

We moved back to houses in Hobyo af­ter three weeks only be­cause of a rain­storm. I had the im­pres­sion that the pi­rates were mak­ing the whole thing up as they went along. They had no clear plan to ex­tract a ran­som or hand me back. They just made out­ra­geous de­mands. Gar­fani would ask $20m for me.

One night in late Feb­ru­ary, a month af­ter my cap­ture, the guards hauled me in a Land Rover, alone, to a re­mote part of the bush to meet the pi­rate king­pin. I had heard of Gar­fanji but never seen a pic­ture. He was a pow­er­ful crim­i­nal, with a rep­u­ta­tion for cru­elty as well as kind­ness to his own men.

The per­son I met in the bush that night seemed groggy and dull-wit­ted; he sat cross-legged in the dust and spoke in a high, al­most child­ish voice. He di­alled a pri­vate Amer­i­can ne­go­tia­tor on his softly glow­ing smart­phone.

The ne­go­tia­tor said, “The man who just handed you the phone is Mo­hammed Gar­fanji,” and my blood felt just like ice wa­ter. “They aren’t beat­ing you or any­thing like that, are they?” he asked.

“No,” I said, al­though one boss, Ali Du­u­laay, had beaten me sev­eral times. “Not sys­tem­at­i­cally,” is what I meant.

The ne­go­tia­tor’s voice was sane, strong, even good‑hu­moured. I had the false idea that some­body was in con­trol. Af­ter a brief con­ver­sa­tion he con­nected me to my mother in Cal­i­for­nia, and hear­ing her was like hear­ing mu­sic for the first time in weeks. But the call was fruit­less, like most of these ran­som con­ver­sa­tions. The pi­rates wanted too much. Even the ne­go­tia­tor sounded sur­prised by “$20 mil­lion”.

Af­ter the call, Gar­fanji searched his phone for the sound file of a news re­port about the Buchanan res­cue. He said, in a slur­ring, ap­a­thetic voice:“Your peo­ple have killed nine of my peo­ple. If they try it with you, we will shoot you.”

“What hap­pened to the hostages?” I de­cided to ask.

“They were also killed.”

He tapped his phone to start the file and tossed it in the dust. I heard a clip from what sounded like an Al-Jazeera broad­cast, which ex­plained in clear Eng­lish that two aid work­ers held cap­tive in So­ma­lia since au­tumn 2011 had been flown by US he­li­copters – alive – to the Amer­i­can base in Dji­bouti. My heart thumped with glee.

“I’m very sorry to hear that,” I told Gar­fanji, and I think no one in that cir­cle of men had any no­tion how the phone had made a fool of their proud com­man­der, by re­veal­ing his poor com­mand of Eng­lish.

* * *

When we re­turned to Hobyo that night, I lay awake in the dark­ened house, un­der a mos­quito net, think­ing about the re­port. Nine dead pi­rates would com­pli­cate ne­go­ti­a­tions. A ran­som seemed hope­lessly far away.

I tried to imag­ine a res­cue in that house, which seemed to be a half-built pi­rate villa wait­ing for a last in­fu­sion of cash. The walls were half a me­tre thick. The win­dows had metal mesh screens in­stead of glass. A con­crete wall sur­rounded the house. A shootout here would be ugly, I thought.

My door to the front porch was flimsy wood, and the guards sat right out­side, on a wo­ven mat. Two or three stayed up all night by chew­ing khat. “It is the So­mali beer,” one of my guards joked.

Khat was far more im­por­tant to them than the fish­ing war off the So­mali coast. They chewed it when­ever they could, not just at night. They had to be locked with me in these prison houses like hostages – a sep­a­rate run­ner came and went with keys – so noth­ing ex­cited them more than the daily ar­rival of fresh bun­dles of khat.

Most So­ma­lis are Su­fis, and chew­ing khat is one in­dul­gence that sets them apart from the more pu­ri­tan Salafists in the mil­i­tant group al-Shabaab. Some of my guards had even fought against al-Shabaab in So­ma­li­a’s civil war that has rum­bled on since the fed­eral gov­ern­ment first col­lapsed in 1991. The men con­sid­ered fun­da­men­tal­ists to be an alien in­va­sion force, and when they heard news on the ra­dio about a drone strike against a Shabaab leader they would re­port it to me and hold up their thumbs: “Amer­ica, good!”

Still, they were quite de­vout. Five times a day they took turns on a clean mat and mum­bled a prayer to­wards Mecca. A Turk­ish naval of­fi­cer once told me that pi­rates by de­f­i­n­i­tion were “not Mus­lim”, and he doubted they would ob­serve Ra­madan; but the pi­rates I met were metic­u­lously ob­ser­vant.

One day I asked a guard about his be­liefs. It was a bit like ask­ing a mafia hit man why he went to church, but I wanted to hear it straight from a pi­rate’s mouth. “Bashko,” I said, “you are a Mus­lim.”

“Yes!” He was proud.

“But you are also a thief.” I bumped my fin­gers to­gether, which had be­come a com­pre­hen­si­ble ges­ture for us. “No same-same.” These things don’t fit to­gether.

A smile crept over his face as it dawned on him what I’d said. He laughed and rat­tled a trans­la­tion to the other guards. He straight­ened up in his chair and tapped his chest.

“I am a Mus­lim,” he said. “But I am also a thief,” he ad­mit­ted. “Why? Be­cause in So­ma­lia, hun­gry-prob­lem.”

“Yes, that’s true.” I held his eyes. But, I added, “I don’t think Is­lam works like that.”

Bashko was my friend among the guards, a quick-minded, ban­tam kid in his 20s with clever eyes and a flash­ing smile. I wanted long, de­tailed con­ver­sa­tions with him – I wished in­tensely for a trans­la­tor – but with our pid­gin mix of Eng­lish and So­mali we could only speak in broad terms.

The the­o­log­i­cal prob­lem nagged him, though, and af­ter a week or two he an­swered my ques­tion. He said the Ko­ran called for strug­gle against non­be­liev­ers. Thiev­ing from in­fi­dels there­fore was not theft.

“Re­ally?”

“Jews, Chris­tians, Bud­dhists …” OK to steal from them, he im­plied. “Mus­lim, no.”

I shook my head. “Does the Ko­ran say you can also kill in­fi­dels?” I asked.

“No.” Bashko was adamant. “All life is sa­cred un­der Al­lah.”

One sura, 9:5, the so-called Verse of the Sword, does men­tion kid­nap­ping, and it is of­ten used as an ex­cuse for hostage-tak­ing and even vi­o­lent ji­had. But we had no Ko­ran in the prison house. In fact, I rarely saw the men read.

“But un­der Al­lah,” I asked Bashko, “it’s OK to steal from other faiths?”

“Yes, it’s in the Ko­ran,” he said, and smiled, as if to say there was noth­ing he could do; the book out­ranked us both.

* * *

For the first few months of 2012 we heard reg­u­lar sur­veil­lance in the air, and the roar of a low-fly­ing Orion plane, every few days, would give me a thrill of re­as­sur­ance and hope. It had the op­po­site ef­fect on my guards. They wanted me to keep my mouth shut every time a plane came near be­cause they thought so­phis­ti­cated Amer­i­can lis­ten­ing de­vices could lo­cate the sound of my voice.

In late March, mem­bers of the same pi­rate gang hi­jacked a long-line tuna ship off So­ma­lia and an­chored it near Hobyo. Rolly and I had to move on­board in mid-April. The idea, I think, was that US he­li­copters would be less likely to de­scend on a rusted in­dus­trial fish­ing boat filled with two or three dozen hostages than they were on a house or a camp in the bush. A few weeks later, in May, the pi­rates moved us back to land for 24 hours. A gap-toothed and rather stu­pid pi­rate called Bakayle said we were about to re­ceive our “plane tick­ets” home. That was a bit­ter joke, and what fol­lowed would shape up to be the strangest and most ap­palling day of my life.

A Somali pirate in front of a hijacked fishing boat in 2012.

A Somali pirate in front of a hijacked fishing boat in 2012. Photograph: Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP

We drove through the dry bush for an hour. The cars made their way to a slop­ing wooded area where other cars, and other So­ma­lis, waited un­der the trees. The men marched Rolly away be­hind a thicket. I felt un­easy, but the pi­rates said, “No prob­lem,” and I sat with them for about 20 min­utes un­til one rolled down his win­dow and we heard a harsh voice cry out.

“Rolly!” the guard said. They led me to a clus­ter of tan­gled trees. I saw a group of men, heav­ily armed, with rocket launch­ers and AK-47s, stand­ing or squat­ting in the dust. Some wore tur­bans and kef­fiyehs. Most were older and seemed to be rank­ing pi­rates or clan lead­ers. They watched me with wary eyes for a re­ac­tion, like large preda­tory cats. Rolly dan­gled up­side-down from a tree. They had tied him by the an­kles to a heavy bough. He swung free in noth­ing but a pair of cot­ton shorts; his arms flopped like a rag dol­l’s. A fat, deep-black man with a high voice whacked him on the chest and feet with a bam­boo cane.

It was a tor­ture scene from the days when Ot­toman of­fi­cials would tie the feet of crim­i­nals and sub­ject them to basti­nado, or pub­lic foot-whip­ping. Two teenagers filmed it. Other So­ma­lis ran up to kick Rolly in the ribs. They seemed to en­joy them­selves. But Rolly did­n’t scream again. He just closed his eyes and let it hap­pen. I won­dered if he was in shock.

The fat man was Mo­hammed Gar­fanji. He handed his cane to an­other So­mali and came up the slope, where he squat­ted some dis­tance from me and squinted.

“Hello, Michael. Do you re­mem­ber me?” He said Rolly had to be pun­ished be­cause he would not ad­mit to be­ing Is­raeli. “But he is­n’t Is­raeli,” I said. “I have found proof on the in­ter­net!” Gar­fanji blus­tered.

The man now hold­ing the cane slid it through the cot­ton knot at Rol­ly’s feet and used it to turn him this way and that. Other men kicked him. I was about to say that Rolly spoke no He­brew; but that could have led to an awk­ward line of ques­tion­ing. (“Have you been to Is­rael?” etc) The So­ma­lis I met har­boured an un­ques­tioned ha­tred for Jews.

I de­cided to say, “He speaks like a man from the Sey­chelles.”

A more ju­nior boss, Ali Du­u­laay, squat­ted next to Rolly in the dust with a lit cig­a­rette. Du­u­laay had or­gan­ised both of our kid­nap­pings. Gar­fanji was the fi­nancier, as far as I un­der­stood – he sat at the top of a num­ber of in­ter­re­lated pi­rate gangs – but Du­u­laay was a di­rect gang leader.

He liked to use his fists, and he’d clob­bered Rolly and me sev­eral times. He was lean but strong, about 40, with acne-marked skin. A lit­tle game oc­curred to him now. He held the fil­ter end of his cig­a­rette up to Rol­ly’s up­side-down face and taunted him. “Come on, Rolly,” he seemed to be say­ing, with a smile, try­ing to slip the cig­a­rette be­tween Rol­ly’s lips. “No, Ali, you know I no like cig­a­rettes.” His face looked strained and flushed.

Bakayle taunted the old man about his ran­som. “We will get $50m from your fam­ily!” Rolly did­n’t an­swer, but from that day on­wards he would re­fer to Bakayle as “Fifty Mil­lion”. At last the pi­rates low­ered him to the ground. He lay on his side, propped up on one el­bow, to re­cover his breath. I went to sit near him and asked the So­ma­lis for food and wa­ter. One guard brought a bot­tle and box of cook­ies. “Are you hun­gry?” I said and Rolly nod­ded. “Just re­lax for a while. I think it’s over.”

But now it was my turn. Gar­fanji said “these men” in the woods wanted to know why no one had wired them money. Where was that $20m? “You’re ask­ing too much,” I told him. “Even you know that.”

Gar­fanji bel­lowed my an­swer to the as­sem­bled bosses, who hollered their dis­sat­is­fac­tion and shook their weapons. One looked like Mustaf Mo­hammed Sheikh, the pi­rate Ash­win and I had in­ter­viewed in Hobyo. He kept a kef­fiyeh wrapped around his face, so it was hard to tell; but the re­sem­blance was chill­ing.

Gar­fanji said I would be sold to al-Shabaab in one hour if the money was­n’t sent right away. “They are com­ing here now!” he said and I felt a mix­ture of fear and ashen con­tempt.

“Well, we don’t have the money,” I mut­tered. “There just is­n’t that much money avail­able.”

“You’re ly­ing! I have looked into your bank ac­count! I know how much money you have.”

His men had stolen a bank card, and I did­n’t know whether some­one had hacked my ac­count. “So you know I don’t even have one mil­lion, Mo­hammed,” I said.

That tripped him up. He wanted to ac­cuse me of hav­ing more, but from the way he dis­sem­bled I gath­ered he had not cracked my ac­count.

“The Amer­i­can gov­ern­ment has­n’t given us any an­swer,” he said. “These are dan­ger­ous men. They are not sat­is­fied. How can we find more money?”

“You have my Ger­man pass­port,” I said. “Maybe the Ger­man gov­ern­ment can help.”

I did­n’t think it could. But I was sur­rounded by armed men and had to say some­thing. Gar­fanji shouted my an­swer to the oth­ers and they shook their weapons. They liked the idea, ap­par­ently. Gar­fanji sug­gested a video. The whole episode, from start to fin­ish, was pi­rate the­atre. We re­hearsed an in­ter­view while the cam­era­men ad­justed their tri­pod and a hand­ful of pi­rates stepped be­hind me, hold­ing heavy weapons. I did not no­tice them at first. On the video they are hard to miss; but they were very quiet and I no­ticed them only at the end, af­ter they stepped away.

An­other man in­sisted I wear a pink blan­ket over my head, to dis­guise me from aer­ial sur­veil­lance, so in the video I look not just wretched but ridicu­lous. Gar­fanji played the in­quir­ing jour­nal­ist. He bel­lowed ques­tions from be­hind the cam­era.

Af­ter­wards Gar­fanji stood on a rise of dirt and ad­dressed the men. He had pre­tended to me­di­ate be­tween me and this wild gang of bosses; now he rose to his true role as their chief. He swung the bam­boo cane and pon­tif­i­cated. “Tyrant” was too big a word for him. He was a play-tyrant, a sadis­tic bully, and I saw for the first time that Gar­fanji, this high-voiced over­weight child, had flecks of grey in his hair.

The cam­era team packed up and stopped to apol­o­gise to me. One had small wire glasses and spoke clear Eng­lish. “I am sorry,” he said. “We can’t do any­thing. We are only jour­nal­ists. We will put these videos on the in­ter­net.”

Within days, in fact, the video would be for sale. Some­one sent an email to Ash­win in Ger­many, of­fer­ing to sell the video for $2,000, but he de­clined. It ended up on the So­ma­lia Re­port, a news site, and be­came the sin­gle well-known video from my time as a hostage. (We made four or five.)

“This was­n’t jour­nal­ism,” I told the teenage cam­era­men and ges­tured at Rolly. “It was hu­mil­i­a­tion.”

“Hu­man­i­tar­ian, yes.”

“That’s not what I said.”

* * *

In the au­tumn of 2012, eight months af­ter my cap­ture, I was moved to a se­ries of bar­ren prison houses in Galka­cyo. I never saw Gar­fanji, or Rolly, again. (Rolly and his friend Marc were both ran­somed and flown to the Sey­chelles in No­vem­ber, 2012.)

The pi­rate now in charge was Dhuxul, an al­most bald, al­most obese man with dead­ened eyes and a tune­less voice. He walked with a limp, on a wooden pros­thetic. He told me his foot had been shot off by Amer­i­can he­li­copters dur­ing the Black Hawk Down in­ci­dent in Mo­gadishu in 1993. That’s not im­pos­si­ble – he was in his late 40s, which is old enough – but the num­ber of pi­rates I met with phys­i­cal scars from that dis­as­trous day of vi­o­lence was im­plau­si­bly high.

Dhuxul was pro­nounced “Duhul”, a dull and shape­less noise, not so dif­fer­ent from the man. He lived in one of our prison homes, which was un­usual. A high-rank­ing boss like him tended to keep his dis­tance, rather than sleep­ing near the hostage. He kept al­co­hol and a TV in his room.

On his or­ders, the men chained my feet every night. Un­til then I had not been fet­tered or tied. Now, af­ter I fin­ished my typ­i­cal din­ner of boiled beans, a guard would kneel in front of my mat­tress and wrap my an­kles in a bi­cy­cle chain. If he did­n’t like my be­hav­iour that day he might tighten the chain; oth­er­wise he’d leave it loose. I had to be re­strained all night, from about six in the evening till the morn­ing call to prayer around five.

There was no clear ex­pla­na­tion for this treat­ment, which started in the spring of 2013. But the long, 18-month pe­riod when my feet had to be chained at night re­mains as a sod­den low point, when some­thing cru­cial shifted in my spirit. I had flown to So­ma­lia with cu­rios­ity and com­pas­sion; I had wanted to show, as far as I could, how So­ma­lis lived and what pi­rates thought. With the chains on, I strug­gled every night with ha­tred and de­bil­i­tat­ing rage. The men treated me like a herd an­i­mal. Around me they smoked, gig­gled, and bowed to Mecca the way a no­mad in the desert might pass days and nights around a camel.

At night I would dream about lively con­ver­sa­tion with fam­ily friends, in Ger­many or Amer­ica, but the dream al­ways ended with the rid­dle of why I had to re­turn to some kind of jail, and I would wake up to the sight of con­crete walls in a house and lan­guid So­ma­lis sit­ting be­side their guns.

A hostage does noth­ing, but the long hours are a cri­sis of long­ing. My sense of self, in fact my san­ity, would surge and ebb. I tended to wake up in a stark panic and pray for no greater mercy than the dawn.

Rolly had told me that in the first few weeks of cap­tiv­ity, he had con­sid­ered over­dos­ing on pain pills. (He was an old man, so the So­ma­lis had been gen­er­ous with a va­ri­ety of pills.) He had learned to pray on his rosary in­stead. I coped in other ways. I was a lapsed Catholic, but I found a Bible to read on the fish­ing boat. Yoga helped to calm my churn­ing mind. I knew my fam­ily and col­leagues were work­ing to get me out, but think­ing about so much money and trou­ble de­voted to the cause of my free­dom brought me close to vi­o­lence.

Sui­cide would have been easy. AK-47s lay around like junk. When I was not with other hostages the no­tion of grab­bing a ri­fle to shoot a few pi­rates, and then my­self, be­gan to seem not just de­sir­able but moral. It would have saved a lot of peo­ple a great deal of trou­ble. It would have spared any Seal team the dizzy­ing risk of a mis­sion. I steered around the idea on some days only by cold logic, since killing my­self would have meant a per­ma­nent loss for my fam­ily and friends.

What helped was a para­dox­i­cal at­ti­tude of for­give­ness to­ward the guards. In dif­fer­ent cir­cum­stances, Bashko and I would have got on well. Most of the guards, I had to re­mem­ber, were just hired hands who de­served pun­ish­ment far less than the bosses who had plot­ted my kid­nap­ping. I also re­mem­bered a fierce Amer­i­can es­say­ist called Richard Mitchell, who for some rea­son was on my mind al­most every day. In one of his books, Mitchell re­vives the an­cient idea, from Epicte­tus, that a vic­tim suf­fers only by his own con­sent. Self-pity does noth­ing but heighten the pain. “To be sick, or to suf­fer, is in­evitable,” writes Mitchell, “but to be­come bit­ter and vin­dic­tive in sick­ness and suf­fer­ing, and to sur­ren­der to ir­ra­tional­ity, sup­pos­ing your­self the in­no­cent and vir­tu­ous vic­tim of the evil in­ten­tions of the world, is not in­evitable. The ap­pro­pri­ate an­swer to the ques­tion, Why me? is the other ques­tion, Why not me?”

That’s sto­icism pure and sim­ple. It helped in So­ma­lia. A sense of vic­tim­hood in those prison houses was easy to con­tract, like a con­ta­gious dis­ease, and re­mem­ber­ing Epicte­tus – how­ever sec­ond-hand – boiled a good deal of neu­ro­sis away.

* * *

In one Galka­cyo house my mos­quito tent and mat­tress lay in front of an open door, fac­ing east. For months in 2013 I watched the dawn sky lighten every morn­ing through an arabesque arch. The men watched with their Kalash­nikovs from a khat-lit­tered mat on the pa­tio. When I stirred at night, they ob­jected. But some­times I had to uri­nate be­fore the morn­ing muezzin.

Wu­uriyaa!” they said one morn­ing when I started to rise in the dark. Hey!

I sat up and lifted my mos­quito net. “I have to pee,” I said.

One guard aimed a flash­light at my face. I sat still and held up my chains.

Kadi,” I said.

The usual night guard went by a nick­name, Madobe. He was a lean and sar­cas­tic, hand­some, sim­ple-minded man who seemed to hate my guts.

Kadi,” I in­sisted, al­though mak­ing any dis­tur­bance at night was against the rules. Madobe lurched for­ward through the door­way to flick his knuckle into my eye.

“Je­sus!” I shouted.

The noise an­gered an­other guard. He ar­gued with Madobe. Hit­ting was against the rules. They ar­gued in whis­pers un­til one of them tossed me the pad­lock keys, which landed with a clink on the floor.

Madobe liked to abuse me. He was adept with his knuckle, and some­times the eye would hurt for a day or two. That morn­ing I de­cided to protest his be­hav­iour. When the chains were off, af­ter dawn, Bashko tried to de­liv­ered my usual bowl of beans.

I shook my head.

“No chum-chum?” he said, us­ing our word for food.

“No,” I said.

“Why?”

“Madobe hit me.”

Dhuxul woke up, and Bashko trans­lated my com­plaint. Other guards up­held my story. Dhuxul gave the men a phleg­matic or­der and went out. He re­turned for lunch with a hot restau­rant meal of spiced rice and boiled goat, in foam trays, for every­one. The men ate with rel­ish on the pa­tio and Dhuxul placed a plate for me near my pil­low, on the floor.

The food smelled de­li­cious, but I did­n’t move. At last Dhuxul made an of­fer. Madobe was asleep in the other room, but he would pun­ish him “tonight,” Bashko trans­lated.Now would I eat?

Re­fus­ing this con­ces­sion risked pun­ish­ment. I had to meet him halfway. Yes, I told Bashko, af­ter Dhuxul pun­ished Madobe, I would eat. Not be­fore. I pushed away the plate. We would save the rice and goat for tonight.

Dhuxul looked an­noyed, but he picked up my chains from a pile on the floor and moved to the other room. I heard Madobe’s voice. The chains clinked. Big deal, I thought – more pi­rate the­atre. Dhuxul wanted to fake me out. But the guards on the pa­tio looked con­cerned. They moved aside and I saw Madobe in Dhux­u­l’s clutches, bent for­ward with his chained hands yanked be­hind his back. Dhuxul smacked him across the head.

Nat­u­rally my con­science was ap­palled. I hated Madobe, but I did­n’t like to see him chained and smacked on my ac­count. The pi­rates, though, were bent on ac­quaint­ing me with hunger and con­fine­ment, with the prospect of death, above all with the rule of force. They were ac­quaint­ing me with So­ma­lia.

“OK Michael?” Bashko re­peated.

The boss had made his con­ces­sion. I had to re­spond.

“OK,” I said.

And Madobe quit thwack­ing me.

* * *

Hostages made fa­mous by me­dia cov­er­age grow more ex­pen­sive, as a rule, so my fam­ily made the ag­o­nis­ing de­ci­sion to keep my case quiet. It was not easy: when­ever ne­go­ti­a­tions fal­tered, so did my moth­er’s faith in the tac­tic, and some­times she warned ne­go­tia­tors and of­fi­cials around her that she wanted to tell the world. The fi­nal de­ci­sion was al­ways hers, and I don’t ques­tion it. The me­dia black­out did­n’t shorten my stay in So­ma­lia, but my guards did lis­ten to the ra­dio like ea­ger kids af­ter each video we made in the bush. They wanted to hear my name on the BBC, and it frus­trated them to hear noth­ing.

“Michael!”

Bashko came to me one day in 2013 with some hot news.

“Amer­ica – no ran­som!”

“No, they won’t pay.” I shook my head in agree­ment.

“Why?” he chided. “Amer­ica no money?”

He had hon­estly ex­pected a ran­som from Wash­ing­ton. The op­ti­mism made my head swim. I thought it was well known in kid­nap­ping cir­cles that the US and British gov­ern­ments paid noth­ing (nor­mally). Gar­fanji should have known it be­fore he fi­nanced my cap­ture; Bashko should have known it by now. Af­ter I went free, at least one FBI agent would ex­press real sur­prise that these men were so ig­no­rant of US pol­icy. But Bashko hardly knew the dif­fer­ence be­tween Britain and France.

Months passed, then years. The bosses thought I could make them rich while I slept in their houses in chains. They hit up every con­ceiv­able source of cash – gov­ern­ments, fam­i­lies, em­ploy­ers, in­sti­tu­tions of any kind. The de­mands were out­ra­geous, fan­ci­ful, and for a long time I sensed ne­go­ti­a­tions had stalled. Dur­ing one rare phone call with my mother in 2013 I blurted in Ger­man that a res­cue “would be wel­come”. By then I did­n’t mind get­ting killed. For Bashko it seemed the height of west­ern evil that he­li­copters might ar­rive be­fore a fat sack of money; but I was numb to the risks of a res­cue, and I imag­ined, naively, that the US no-ran­som pol­icy would re­quire a con­sis­tent mil­i­tary re­sponse.

My case was par­tic­u­larly dif­fi­cult. Two gov­ern­ments had to be prod­ded for help; two gov­ern­ments had to jos­tle for com­mand. I spent 32 months as a hostage, and it is pos­si­ble that the os­cil­la­tion be­tween US and Ger­man re­spon­si­bil­ity length­ened my time in So­ma­lia. In the end I owed my free­dom to a ran­som cob­bled to­gether by my fam­ily and a num­ber of US and Ger­man in­sti­tu­tions. But it came with­out warn­ing. I sup­pose Bashko did try to tell me; but ru­mours of a ran­som sur­faced every month, and I quit pay­ing at­ten­tion. The pi­rates’ wispy gos­sip and promises of free­dom were more mad­den­ing than the raw pas­sage of time, so I learned to lis­ten to them with dis­tant be­muse­ment, the way an old man watches TV.

* * *

The morn­ing of 23 Sep­tem­ber 2014, was not un­usual. I woke up in the dark and waited for a guard to toss over keys for my chains. I un­did the pad­locks, went for a piss, and came back to face a sullen bowl of beans.

Af­ter break­fast I had a phone call with a mys­te­ri­ous Amer­i­can ne­go­tia­tor named Bob. My So­mali trans­la­tor, Yoo­nis, let me talk for 30 sec­onds be­fore he yanked the phone from my hands. Bob man­aged to ex­plain ex­actly noth­ing. Yoo­nis said, “Proof of life, only!”

Around noon I had to use the toi­let, and from the high, bro­ken-tiled, sun-shot bath­room I heard the front com­pound gate open for a car. That was strange – cars came at night, as a rule. A young So­mali named Hashi stood out­side the door with his gun.

“Michael? Gari,” he said.

Michael, your car is here.

“What gari?” I said. “I’m busy.”

“No prob­lem.”

When I came out the men were buzzing with en­thu­si­asm. Three So­ma­lis were show­ing off a clear plas­tic sack of bound hun­dred-dol­lar bills. The bag was sealed. I could­n’t tell if the bills were real. “You are go­ing free!” they said, but I did­n’t be­lieve it. I’d heard it too many times, and I had grown stunted and cramped. My brain felt like a fish in a swamp.

“You must pack your bags,” one of them said. “You are go­ing to the air­port.”

I had a bag of dirty clothes. I threw them to­gether but still was­n’t con­vinced. I climbed into the car with two men, Yoo­nis and an­other trans­la­tor. Nor­mally eight armed men crammed me, blind­folded, into the car. Not this time. We drove through Galka­cyo – what the men had called Harad­heere for al­most two years – and out some dis­tance into the bush, where an­other car waited.

“Get out,” said Yoo­nis. “You are free.”

I felt be­wil­dered but I climbed into the new car and found my­self alone with a strange dri­ver, a So­mali who spoke Amer­i­can Eng­lish. I was still con­vinced that the promise of free­dom was false. But, to my sur­prise, he di­alled a num­ber while he drove, and on the phone I heard not just Bob, the ne­go­tia­tor, but my mother.

“Where are you?” I was as­ton­ished. “Not in Galka­cyo.”

“No, we’re in Cal­i­for­nia,” my mother said.

“Your dri­ver will take you to a ho­tel,” Bob ex­plained, “and an­other So­mali will drive you to the air­port. Your pi­lot’s name is Derek.”

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Michael Scott Moore. Photograph: Christian Jungeblodt

Galka­cy­o’s de­crepit Ab­dul­lahi Yusuf In­ter­na­tional Air­port, to the north­east of town, was just a dry airstrip with a few low build­ings, just like I re­mem­bered. Now, on the as­phalt, a small sin­gle-en­gine plane waited. Next to it stood Derek, a short leath­ery man in mir­rored sun­glasses – a bush pi­lot. When we pulled next to the plane and I opened the door, he stood un­der the wing to snap a photo.

“For your mother,” Derek said in a British ac­cent.

He shook my hand and gave me a back­pack stuffed with clothes. Derek said he would de­liver me to Mo­gadishu. From there I would take an Amer­i­can C-130 to Nairobi. Re­lief was not quite the word – I was still too shat­tered to feel re­lief or ex­cite­ment or joy – but it seemed in­cred­i­ble to me that Derek could fly a plane. He was the first com­pe­tent man I’d met in a long time.

I fas­tened my seat­belt. Derek climbed in and slammed his door. A So­mali on the tar­mac asked us to wait “just half an hour.”

“What for?” said Derek.

“A jour­nal­ist is com­ing, he wants to take your pic­ture,” said the So­mali.

“No,” I told Derek.

I would­n’t hear for days what was hap­pen­ing in an­other part of Galka­cyo. The ran­som had to be di­vided. Every­one con­nected to me would want a cut of the money. Within two days sev­eral rank­ing men – in­clud­ing Dhuxul, Ahmed Dirie, and Ali Du­u­laay – would sit down for a tense meet­ing in front of a house be­long­ing to a boss called Nuur Ja­reer. Du­u­laay and Ahmed Dirie, my kid­nap­pers, wanted a large share of the $1.6m ran­som. But by now they were out­siders. They had to de­mand the money from the sub-group that held me, which in­cluded Dhuxul and Nuur Ja­reer.

Guards at the meet­ing aimed their weapons in a com­pli­cated Mex­i­can stand­off, for mu­tual se­cu­rity, ac­cord­ing to peo­ple who de­scribed the scene to me later. But the man aim­ing at Du­u­laay pulled his trig­ger. Gun­fire un­leashed by the oth­ers killed Ahmed Dirie, his brother, and one more of my kid­nap­pers. Du­u­laay died on the spot. The boss Nuur Ja­reer was in­jured. Dhuxul pulled him to safety, but within an­other three days Nuur Ja­reer would die of his wounds.

Later I heard the group had in­vested $2m to hold me. The top men must have been sorely dis­ap­pointed.

The plane be­gan to roll for­ward. Derek and I put on head­sets. “Galka­cyo tower, Galka­cyo tower,” he ra­dioed. “Re­quest per­mis­sion to take off,” he said and gave his call sign. “Two souls on board.”

No re­sponse. An­other de­lay.

“Some­times they don’t an­swer,” he mum­bled.

I was still shell-shocked and con­fused. My brain would feel cramped for months. Peo­ple say, “You must have been over­joyed,” but any ran­som is a filthy com­pro­mise, and I had long ago given up on hope as a dan­ger­ous in­dul­gence. As the plane moved for­ward, I looked at the cracked and sun-beaten white build­ings of the air­port – these ob­jects of fan­tasy for two and a half years – with mute an­i­mal won­der.

“Galka­cyo tower, Galka­cyo tower,” Derek re­peated. “Re­quest per­mis­sion for take­off. Two souls on­board.”

At last there was some noise from the ra­dio.

“Yes, OK,” crack­led a So­mali voice, and Derek lined up his plane.

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