Please select your home edition
Edition
X-Yachts X4.3

Hostage sailor killed by French Special forces in rescue operation

by BW Media roundup on 11 Apr 2009
Florent Lemacon, killed by French Special Forces during an attempted rescue SW
In a rescue operation that went horribly wrong for the cruising sailors held hostage by Somali pirates, the skipper of a yacht has been killed during the attempted rescue.

Two pirates were also killed when a French special forces unit attacked the hijacked vessel as it drifted toward the Somali coast. The pirates opened fire and the special forces team fired back at them.


Four other hostages, including the killed sailor's wife and three-year-old child, were freed from the hijacked yacht after almost a week of being held captive, French officials said. The yacht had been seized on Saturday 400-500 miles off the Somali coastline and heading for the coast of Kenya – NOT in the Gulf of Aden as reported incorrectly in some of the world's press.

The French military attempted the rescue operation after the pirates refused the French government's offers, including an offer to exchange an officer for the mother and child held aboard.

Killed was Florent Lemacon, who was sailing their yacht Tanit with his wife Chloe and their son, Colin and another couple.

In a statement, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said France won't pay blackmail to pirates, Defense News reported.

'Today (Friday) with the threats becoming more and more specific, the pirates refusing the offers made to them and the Tanit heading towards the coast, a operation to free the hostages was decided upon,' said a spokesman for President Nicolas Sarkozy.

French chief of defence staff General Jean-Louis Georgelin said Lemacon died in crossfire between the pirates and the elite troops when they 'went down into the cabins,' adding that the pirates were using Kalashnikov assault rifles.


'Three pirates visible on the deck were neutralised,' he said. 'Two of them died instantaneously and the third fell into the water.'

Defence Minister Herve Morin said that an investigation has been launched into the death. French troops had immobilised the yacht on Thursday by firing into the sails, said Morin. Negotiators had done everything they could to reach an agreement with the pirates, he said. 'We even offered them a ransom.'

The French couple Chloe and Florent Lemacon had left France with their son Colin, then two years old, aboard the 42ft flush-decked Colin Archer cutter and picked up another couple along the way. They were planning to sail via Kenya.

The boat was seized mid-ocean, about 500 miles from the Somali coast and about 1,000 miles from the Seychelles. Florent Lemacon had told his father just before the attack that they had lost the use of the engine. They said that they knew the risks and had taken what they considered to be the least dangerous route through the northern Indian Ocean. Unluckily for them the pirates seem now to have turned their attention southward, just where they were sailing.

The father also told French press that that the crew were experienced sailors who knew the risks. He added that they are penniless, unemployed liveaboards with no means of paying a ransom.

Writing on their internet blog two weeks before the hijacking, Chloe and Florent Lemacon said that they had started sailing with the lights off to avoid detection. 'We are in the middle of the piracy zone, but so far there is nothing to report.

'The danger is there and has indeed become greater over the past months, but the ocean is vast. The pirates must not be allowed to destroy our dream,' they wrote.

The French navy had strongly advised Tanit's crew against travelling to Kenya and warned them of the serious risk posed by pirates in the waters off the coast of Somalia, an army spokesman said.

'They met the crew of the surveillance ship Floreal on March 20 and were strongly advised not to pursue the trip to Kenya, even at great distance from the Somali coast, said army spokesman Christophe Prazuck.

An email message was sent to Tanit on March 27 stating that sailing to Kenya was 'very dangerous' due to a spike in the number of pirate attacks.

France is the only country so far to have intervened successfully for attacked yachts, having used commando type operations to release two previous yachts without any loss of life of the hostages.

Zhik - Made for WaterSail Port Stephens 2026Sea Sure 2025

Related Articles

Min River's historic Sydney Hobart overall victory
Jiang Lin is the first woman and with Alexis Loison they are the first two handed crew to win Min River has been declared the Overall winner of the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, making her owner, Jiang Lin, the first woman to ever win the race.
Posted today at 11:19 am
Harcourts Hobart Launceston to Hobart Yacht Race
A finish to remember, presentations held this afternoon The 2025 Harcourts Hobart Launceston to Hobart Yacht Race is officially wrapped, with presentations held this afternoon alongside the Ocean Racing Club of Victoria's Melbourne to Hobart Yacht Race.
Posted today at 7:16 am
Alien dominates the 2025 Melbourne to Hobart
Taking a clean sweep of all handicap divisions Justin Brenan and his team of diehard sailors from the Royal Yacht Club of Victoria, have sailed their Lidgard 36 yacht, Alien, to take a clean sweep of all handicap divisions in the 2025 Melbourne to Hobart 'Westcoaster' Yacht Race.
Posted today at 6:30 am
The Jackal wins line honours in 2025 M2H
Westcoaster completed in 3 days, 5 hours, 22 minutes and 23 seconds Matt Setton's Ker 11.3, The Jackal has claimed line honours in the 2025 Melbourne to Hobart ‘Westcoaster' Yacht Race, in a time of 3 days, 5 hours, 22 minutes and 23 seconds.
Posted today at 1:38 am
Sydney Hobart – A very ordinary Hobart
Now don't get me wrong. That's a not a description of the on-water action. Far from it, actually Now don't get me wrong. That's a not a description of the on-water action from the 80th rendition of the Boxing Day Classic. Far from it, actually. Rather, it is a reflection upon that the elements that an ‘ordinary' Hobart invariably involves
Posted today at 1:02 am
Rolex Sydney Hobart: BNC penalised
The New Caledonian two hander has been penalised after making a declaration to the Race Committee The protest by the Race Committee versus BNC – my::NET / LEON following the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race has been upheld by the International Jury. A time penalty has been imposed which is greater than BNC's provisional win margin.
Posted today at 12:59 am
The Jackal wins Melbourne to Hobart line honours
Matt Setton's Ker 11.3 finishes in a time of 3 days, 5 hours, 22 minutes and 23 seconds Matt Setton's Ker 11.3, The Jackal has claimed line honours in the 2025 Melbourne to Hobart 'Westcoaster' Yacht Race, in a time of 3 days, 5 hours, 22 minutes and 23 seconds.
Posted on 30 Dec
Celebrating the Great Race from half a world away
The Rolex Sydney Hobart delivers a tough test While early winter isn't exactly a great time for sailing in the Pacific Northwest, this year I reeled my family into the Great Race's Boxing Day drama.
Posted on 30 Dec
Sydney Hobart: Two protests now lodged
Two protests now over the way the French/New Caledonian sheeted a sail using a pole. The International Jury for the Rolex Sydney Hobart Race will hear two protests, on Wednesday, the first by the yacht Min River (AUS) against the overall honours leader BNC - my::NET / LEON (FRA), along with a second by the Race Committee.
Posted on 30 Dec
Happy ending for USA's Bacchanal
American yachtsman Ron Epstein was thrilled to finally finish the Rolex Sydney Hobart this morning American yachtsman Ron Epstein was thrilled to finally finish the Rolex Sydney Hobart this morning at 6.07.59am, the relief and joy palpable after he was forced to retire 18 and a half hours into last year's race after Bacchanal's boom broke.
Posted on 30 Dec