| The sailors, including Arnel Balbero (right), flew to Kenya after their release |
A group of sailors who were held
hostage by Somali pirates for nearly five years survived in part by
eating rats, one survivor has told the BBC.
| There were originally 29 men but one died during the capture of their ship and another two died from illnesses in captivity |
Mr Balbero was among the crew of the FV Naham 3 when it was captured by Somali pirates south of the Seychelles. One crew member was killed during the capture, according to non-governmental organisation Oceans Beyond Piracy.
A year later, the ship sank and the crew were brought onshore in Somalia. Two sailors subsequently died of illnesses. Mr Balbero told the BBC that the last four and a half years had left him and his compatriots "like walking dead".
Asked how the pirates treated them, he said: "They give us small amount of water only... We eat rat. Yes, we cook it in the forest." "[We] just eat anything, anything. You feel hungry, you eat."
He also spoke of their difficulties adjusting to life after their ordeal, saying: "I don't know what is... outside of this world when this finish, so it's very hard to start again."