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US sailors who thwarted pirate hijackers fly home

| March 19, 2009 11:00 PM

MOMBASA, Kenya - The American crew who thwarted Somali pirates was flying home to the U.S. on Wednesday but without its captain, who was still aboard a Navy destroyer after being rescued from the hijackers, their shipping company said.

Maersk spokesman Gordan van Hook said the crew members of the Maersk Alabama left Mombasa on a chartered plane heading for Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, where they were expected to land late Wednesday.

Their reunion with Capt. Richard Phillips will now will take place in the United States, van Hook said. Phillips had planned to fly home with his crew but he was aboard the USS Bainbridge when it was diverted Tuesday to try to help a second U.S. cargo ship under attack by pirates. That ship, the Liberty Sun, escaped the attack.

A Kenyan airport official said a second chartered plane was waiting at the Mombasa airport for Phillips.

Navy SEAL snipers on the Bainbridge killed three pirates Sunday to free Phillips after a five-day standoff.

Phillips' wife, Andrea, and two children are expected to reunite with him but her mother, Catherine Coggio, said she didn't know when or where. Andrea Phillips was still in Vermont as of Wednesday morning, she said.

"We're just so thankful that things have turned out the way they have," Coggio told The Associated Press by phone from her home in Richmond, Vt.

She didn't know when Phillips would return to Underhill, Vt., where he lives.

A woman who answered the phone at Phillips' home would give no details of the family's plans.

Serena Murphy, the wife of chief officer Shane Murphy, joked that she will take him hostage when he gets home to Seekonk, Mass.

"Well, I'm going to give him food and water. That's a positive for him. But I think I'll make the accommodations a lot more pleasant than the pirates did," she said Wednesday on NBC's "Today" show.

Asked if she wants him to go back to sea, she said, "I personally don't but I support him in whatever decision he decides to make."

Third mate Colin Wright said the experience won't keep him off the water, but hopes action will be taken to stop piracy.

"I hope to be able to sail all of the waters of the world in safety," he said in an interview on ABC's "Good Morning America." "And we've got to do something about pirates."

Wright, from Galveston, Texas, and Murphy told ABC the first thing they want to do is hug their families.

"I'll just love to hug my mother," Wright said. "Everybody out there give your mother a hug. Yeah, don't wait. Life is precious. And what a beautiful world."

The sister of second mate Ken Quinn was praying for him to get safely back home. She told CBS' "Early Show" that Ken, who lives in Bradenton, Fla., had e-mailed her that "he's having nightmares about being in the dark room where they were hiding, and the pirates shooting into the dark."

A service of the Associated Press(AP)