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Somali Pirates Continue to Plague the Horn of Africa
OilPrice.com ^ | 07/05/2010 | John Daly

Posted on 05/07/2010 3:34:32 PM PDT by Faketan

The Horn of Africa has become a hotbed of piracy due to outdated maritime laws, the lack of a Somali government and gut-wrenching poverty.

Where there is a sea, there are pirates. - Greek proverb

To many people, the term "piracy" evokes images of the movie Pirates of the Caribbean. Until last year piracy was an annoyingly persistent low-level irritant for maritime nations, clustered around several global hotspots, including African waters, the Straits of Malacca and relatively isolated incidents in Latin America.

Last year the problem metastasized in the waters of Somalia, where now a motley international coalition of about 30 warships, including vessels from NATO members Italy, Latvia, Turkey, Greece, the US, the UK, Denmark, Spain and Germany, along with India, France, China, Russia and Japan are attempting to contain the problem. Piracy is now big business: Kenyan Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula estimates that in 2008 the Somali pirates received $US150 million in ransom payments.

In January the International Chamber of Commerce's International Maritime Bureau Piracy Reporting Centre stated that 2008 piratical attacks worldwide totaled 293, with 49 vessels hijacked and 889 crew members taken hostage, its highest figures since it began reporting in 1992. Attacks in the Gulf of Aden and Somali waters accounted for 111 incidents, an increase of nearly 200 percent from 2007. Nigeria ranked second with 40 reported incidents while the Malacca Straits saw only two attacks in 2008, compared to seven in 2007.

High Profile Incidents

The Ukrainian freighter Faina was seized on 25 September 2008. What focused attention on the ship was its cargo of 33 T-72 tanks and military equipment, ostensibly bound for Kenya. After protracted negotiations which saw an initial ransom demand of US$35 million whittled down to US$3.5 million during the ship's 134-day captivity, the Faina and her 20 crewmen was released on 5 February, but not before her captain had died of apparent natural causes. Full article at: Somalia Pirates


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Military/Veterans; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: military; pirates; poverty; somaila

1 posted on 05/07/2010 3:34:33 PM PDT by Faketan
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To: Faketan
I'll re-write the title for you ala MSNBC.

Somali Pirates Poor, mis-guided youth continue to plague horn of Africa

2 posted on 05/07/2010 3:51:53 PM PDT by PROCON (We WILL remember in November!)
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To: Faketan
If I were the president, I could stop this crap in 48 hours, a week tops. The length of time would depend only on how long it takes the news to get around in Somalia (and Yemen).

American ship captains and crew get blanket amnesty. And if the World Court doesn't like my solution, well, B-2s and smart bombs work over The Hague, too.

The sharks in the straits around the Horn of Africa would be happy.

3 posted on 05/07/2010 5:02:45 PM PDT by rmh47 (Go Kats! - Got Seven? [NRA Life Member])
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

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