Cruise passengers spend 10 days in blackout for fear of pirates

1,900 passengers aboard a 104 day cruise around the world got an unsettling surprise after they departed from Sydney, Australia toward Dubai on the Sea Princess.

For ten days, the passengers had to endure a mandatory dusk-to-dawn blackout for fear of pirate attacks. "No deck parties, no movies under the stars, no late-night outdoor bar hopping or pool dipping" were just some of the bans included in the blackout ordered by Captain Gennaro Arma, recalls Carolyn Jasinski, a passenger on the ship. The ship essentially become a ghost - all curtains were drawn, all lights were dimmed or turned off.

Piracy is still a problem on the high seas, particularly in the Indian Ocean, the Arabian Sea, the Gulf of Aden and the Suez Canal. Captain Gennaro Arma wanted to remind his crew and his passengers that the threat of pirates "was real and the ship must be prepared for a pirate attack."

Jasinski says that in addition to the blackout, there were obligatory pirate drills to prepare the crew and passengers in case an actual attack happened.

"[The passengers] were advised to sit on the floor and to hang on to hand rails in case the ship had to maneuver away from pirate ships. In the case of a real threat, those passengers in outside cabins were told to close and lock their balcony doors, then lock their entrance door to their cabin and take shelter in the corridors," she says in her essay detailing the experience.

A spokesperson for the operator of the cruise said the ship was not facing a specific threat from pirates but the actions were taken as a cautionary measure.

"Any measures aboard Sea Princess were simply taken out of an abundance caution and not in response to a specific threat and are common to international shipping sailing in the region," the spokesperson told The Telegraph.

FOX NEWS CONTRIBUTED TO THIS REPORT