JAKARTA // A fuel tanker that went missing from a Malaysian port was taken by its crew in a dispute with their employer, Indonesian and Malaysian officials said on Wednesday.
Maritime authorities from both countries have been searching for the Indonesian-flagged M T Vier Harmoni after it dropped out of radio contact on Tuesday evening.
There were suspicions the tanker had been hijacked. For years, gangs of armed thieves have targeted small tankers operating off South-East Asian coasts, looking for marine diesel and oil to steal and then sell. Militants in the southern Philippines have staged ransom kidnappings in the regional waters in recent months.
Indonesia’s western naval command said that it had information the captain of the vessel twice informed his employer he was taking the ship back to the Indonesian island of Batam because of an “internal management problem”.
It said there was no indication of any violence and it was coordinating with Malaysia to locate the ship.
Vier Abdul Jamal, chief executive of the ship’s owner Vierlines Asia Group, said the tanker has 10 Indonesian crew and was chartered by another company for two years.
The charterer lost contact with the Vier Harmoni on Tuesday evening and its radio transponder has not been active since, Adbul Jamal said.
He said it would be illegal for the captain to remove the ship without clearance, notwithstanding any dispute.
The Malaysian maritime agency said the tanker was carrying 900,000 litres of diesel and left from a port in Malaysia’s southern Johor state.
Ahmad Puzi Kahar, the agency’s chief, said it has concluded there was a dispute between the crew and the operator of the vessel. He said the agency has spoken to the captain of the vessel.
* Associated Press
