Tuesday 18 June 2013

West Africa piracy overtakes Somali ship attacks


An Ivory Coast gendarmerie boat is at the port of Abidjan. Photo: April 2013The Gulf of Guinea "has not received the attention that was brought to Somalia," the reports says

Related Stories

Piracy off the coast of West Africa has now overtaken Somali piracy, a report by the International Maritime Bureau (IMB) and other seafarers' groups says.
It says 966 sailors were attacked in West Africa in 2012, compared with 851 off the Somali coast.
West African pirates mostly steal fuel cargo and the crews' possessions, often resorting to extreme violence.
Five of the 206 hostages seized last year off West Africa have been killed, the document says.
'Sadistic methods'

Analysis

Maritime piracy off West Africa differs from that off Somalia and may eventually prove harder to deal with.
In the Somali Basin there is a large concentration of patrolling warships - from the US Navy 5th Fleet, Nato, the EU and others - as well as reconnaissance aircraft, all acting in coordination. But in the Gulf of Guinea there is not one but several national coastlines to patrol with no single unified policing body.
Somali pirates generally aim to capture a ship with minimum casualties then hold the vessel, its crew and cargo to ransom for millions of dollars, sometimes for as long as two years. West African pirates tend to be land-based criminals, mostly from Nigeria, who look to steal the cargo and any valuables they can find in a quick grab-and-dash operation, often staying onboard for less than a week.
International efforts to tackle piracy off West Africa have been slow to take effect.
The report, entitled The Human Cost of Maritime Piracy 2012, was released by the International Maritime Bureau (IMB), the Oceans Beyond Piracy (OBP) project and the Maritime Piracy Humanitarian Response Programme (MPHRP).
It says that despite the growing number of pirate attacks in West Africa's Gulf of Guinea region "the area has not received the attention that was brought to Somalia".
Pirates typically target fuel cargo, selling it on the lucrative black market.
"In Nigeria, money moves quite quickly, unlike in Somalia," one seafarer is quoted as saying in the document.
"In Somalia, it would take months. In Nigeria, the pirates take our (oil) cargo and the money of the (shipping) company. It would take only weeks, it is quite fast."
The highest risk area for pirate activity in West Africa is off the coast of Nigeria, by far the biggest country, and oil producer, in the region.
Because successive governments there have failed to develop sufficient domestic oil refining capacity, Nigerian waters are full of tankers exporting crude oil and importing refined petroleum that are vulnerable to attack, says BBC international development correspondent Mark Doyle.
Corruption and, until recently, armed rebellion in the oil producing areas, have led to the development of an entire, well-organised industry for stealing - or "bunkering", as it is known in Nigeria - oil products, he says.
Map of Nigeria
That industry has become almost institutionalised by a national government subsidy on petrol, our correspondent adds.
The report released on Tuesday says tackling piracy in both West Africa and Somalia requires "co-operation between efforts at sea and those on land to build maritime security and provide job opportunities to potential pirates".
At the same time, the findings show a 78% drop in piracy off Somalia last year compared with 2011.
The report says this is due to better practices by ship's captains and crews and the increasing use of armed guards aboard vessels in the region.
But it adds that at least 78 hostages are still being held captive by Somali pirates. Some sailors have been already held for more two years.
Many Somali pirates have used cruel and sadistic methods to extort ransom payments, it says.

No comments:

Why cows may be hiding something but AI can spot it

  By Chris Baraniuk Technology of Business reporter Published 22 hours ago Share IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Herd animals like...