Passengers on the MV Seabourn Spirit, many of them
still in their nightclothes, were told to take cover in the restaurant as
would-be pirates peppered the vessel with grenades and gunfire, according to
eyewitnesses.
"I was awake doing some work when I heard what sounded like a crack from
outside at 5.50 am," passenger Norman Fisher said.
"I looked out of the window and saw a small boat with about five people in it
about 20 yards away.
"One of them clearly had a rifle. Later I realised that two of them had
rifles and one had some kind of rocket launcher," he added.
Fisher,
a 55-year-old solicitor, was one of 18 British tourists on board the luxury
cruise liner at the time of the attack, in waters notorious for piracy.
The 10,000 tonne Bahamas-registered vessel was sailing towards the Indian
Ocean port of Mombasa, Kenya, on a 16-day cruise out of Alexandria, Egypt.
Mr Fisher said the captain, Sven Erik Pedersen, tried to ram one of the
pirates' speedboats in an attempt to capsize it and stop them getting aboard.
"The captain didn't sound the usual alarm because he was worried that people
would run up on the deck thinking it was a fire, and that would be the worst
place to be," Fisher explained.
"Instead he made an announcement at five past six, saying: 'Stay inside, stay
inside, we are under attack'."
After repelling the pirates, Pedersen explained the situation to passengers
and was greeted with a round of applause, he added.
"It was all a very surreal experience, not the kind of thing you expect on a
cruise," Fisher recalled.
Barman Richard Fuller described the situation as a "very, very terrifying
experience".
"A lot of the guests are a bit nervous still," he told BBC News 24
television. "The guests that were in the suite that was hit are very terrified,
but apart from that we are all okay."
Deborah Natansohn, president of Seabourn Cruise Lines, said that one person
suffered minor injuries but the remaining passengers and crew of the vessel were
"doing very well" and heading towards the Seychelles.
Regarding whether the Miami-based company would continue cruises in the area,
she told CNN television: "We're obviously evaluating the situation now and we'll
take that decision at a later point."
Natansohn described the attack as a "highly unusual incident".
She added: "We don't know of any other time where a cruise ship has been
attacked by pirates. They generally tend to (attack) tankers and freighters that
have very small number of crew on board."