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Pirates held for questioning in Paris

  • Story Highlights
  • NEW: Six pirates who hijacked French luxury yacht now in custody in France
  • More than a dozen seized "Le Ponant" off coast of Somalia on April 4
  • Pirates were chased by French forces after the 30 hostages were released
  • The six men are being held at the Paris court where they are being questioned
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PARIS, France (CNN) -- Six pirates who hijacked a French luxury yacht off the coast of Somalia are now in custody in France, a diplomatic official said Wednesday.

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The French gendarmerie headquarters where six suspected pirates have been transferred for questioning.

The six men are being held at the Paris court where they are being questioned, said an official from the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs who did not want to be named.

The case is now a matter for the Justice Ministry, the official said, and no charges have been filed yet.

The French Foreign Ministry said Wednesday it was negotiating with Somalia over authorization for the pirates' transfer to France, even though it has already taken place.

The French military captured the six pirates in a dramatic chase through the Somalian desert as they tried to make their escape.

The pirates had just released the 30 hostages from the yacht and were trying to make off with ransom money when the military caught up with them on the African mainland.

French helicopter gunships shot at the pirates' cars, disabling one of them. When the pirates then tried to escape on foot, the military gave chase and apprehended them. Video Watch the pirates being chased down »

It was not clear when the pirates arrived in France. They had been held on a French warship in the region while the French government decided whether to bring them to Paris for trial.

More than a dozen pirates seized the yacht "Le Ponant" on April 4 off the coast of Somalia and held it and its 30-member crew hostage for a week. No passengers were on board.

It was unclear how many pirates remained on the loose. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs official said the government believed between 12 and 15 pirates were involved in the hijacking.

The hostages were freed following negotiations between the pirates and the French government, and arrived back in France this week. Video Watch the freed captives arrive on a ship »

Though they weren't harmed, the crew members said they were constantly afraid they would be. One unidentified crew member -- a waiter aboard the yacht -- said the captain tried to hide female crew members out of fear the pirates might rape them.

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"We were afraid that they were going to touch the girls," said the unnamed man, interviewed by the French military. "So the captain just gave protection for them."

French media have reported payment of a $2 million ransom, which the ship's French owners have neither confirmed nor denied. The French government says no public money was involved. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

CNN's Vanessa Barbier contributed to this report

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