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Shipping body urges Africa to cooperate fighting piracy
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 29 - 04 - 2010


A leading shipping industry body Thursday urged
Somalia and other African countries to cooperate in fighting piracy
off their shores, noting that multilateral efforts in Asia had
restored security for merchant ships in the region, according to dpa.
"We know the problems in the Gulf of Aden and in the Indian Ocean
can be solved because anti-piracy multilateral initiatives have
worked in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore," said Robert
Lorenz-Meyer, president of the Baltic and International Maritime
Council.
Lorenz-Meyer, head of a global group of 2,720 shipping companies,
was speaking at an anti-piracy conference in Singapore, organized by
the Regional Cooperation Agreement on Combating Piracy and Armed
Robbery (RECAAP).
Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand had
set the stage for cooperation between states, both in terms of
information exchange and mobilization of resources, he said.
RECAAP's assistant director for research Lee Yin Mui gave the case
of the hijacked Singaporean tugboat Asta as an example of effective
cooperation in fighting piracy.
The tug was hijacked by pirates on February 6 off Malaysia's
Tioman island and recovered three weeks later in the southern
Philippines, due to "good inter-agency coordination" in the region,
she said.
The pirates had been arrested, and all 12 crew members rescued,
Lee said.
In contrast, not all states bordering the Gulf of Aden and the
Indian Ocean had the capacity to provide protection for merchant
ships, nor were they collating information, Lorenz-Meyer said.
While the situation might not be exactly the same, "this cannot be
used as an excuse for failure," he said.
Asian countries were even contributing to the multinational naval
presence off Africa's shores, Lorenz-Meyer said. "Many wonder how
countries in the closer proximity of this area can remain less
engaged than those far away."
"As the waters of Asia became safer, the situation off Somalia as
well off the West Coast of Africa worsened," he said.
In the first quarter of 2010, 20 actual and five attempted
incidents of piracy and armed robbery were registered in Asia, up
from 14 and one in the same period a year ago, respectively,
according to RECAAP's Singapore-based Information Sharing Centre.
However, it said, the overall rise could be attributed to an
increase of low-level attacks mainly against ships at ports and
anchorages in Indonesia, which rose to 17 in the first quarter, up
from nine a year earlier.
The London-based International Maritime Bureau said earlier the
number of piracy incidents worldwide dropped in the first quarter of
2010, but it warned that Somali pirates were widening the scope of
their attacks.
From January to March, 18 pirate attacks were reported off
Somalia, the highest number worldwide, followed by the Gulf of Aden
with 12 cases.
"Governments of the world must get their act together,"
Lorenz-Meyer said, adding that adequate national legislation was
needed to prosecute pirates.
"Continuing a catch-and-release approach will not solve this
problem," he said, "We must see this change to catch-and-prosecute."
Pursuit, arrest, prosecution and punishment had to be part of the
solution, he said, because "If there are no consequences for the
pirates, they will continue to attack ships."
However, some anti-piracy tools remained still out of reach due to
regulatory limitations, Lorenz-Meyer said. For example, Interpol
databases to identify pirates were still only available to police
officers.
"We hope that one solution that could be instrumental in arresting
pirates, namely the placement of police officers on the patrolling
naval ships, will in the not so distant future result in more arrests
and fewer cases of catch and release," he said.


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