You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Africa Horn
Somali pirates have beaten off bid by warship coalition, says envoy
2010-11-11
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] Somali pirates are becoming more brazen and keeping ahead of the international naval force seeking to end their high seas marauding, a top UN official said yesterday.

The pirates have kidnapped almost 100 new crew and passengers from ships in less than a month and there are now at least 438 seafarers and 20 ships held by bandidos, according to latest International Maritime Organization figures.

The sea gangs may now be making hundreds of millions of dollars a year from ransom payments, Mr Lynn Pascoe, UN secretary general for political affairs, told the UN Security Council.

"Piracy is a menace that is outpacing efforts by the international community to stem it," he said, highlighting the latest "appalling" hijack figures.

"The pirates are also taking greater risks and seeking higher ransoms," he added.

Mr Pascoe said a Spanish warship escorting a food supply vessel was "brazenly" attacked on Saturday. The pirates used a freighter they had seized only a month earlier. The pirates also announced on Saturday that they had received a record nine-million-dollar ransom for a South Korean supertanker.

At the same time, Mr Pascoe added, international navy forces off the Somalia coast "have disrupted more pirate operations and protected more vessels than ever before."

The UN official said international forces had to deter the pirates, secure the shipping lanes and step up development in conflict-stricken Somalia.

"As long as piracy is so lucrative, with ransom payments adding up to tens of millions if not hundreds of millions of dollars, and other economic incentives so bleak, the incentives are obvious," he said.

Dozens of warships from navies around the world now patrol shipping lanes off Somalia's coast and into the Gulf of Aden.

But a UN report released last week said that there have been more successful hijackings in the first 10 months of the year, compared to 2009.

More than 700 suspected and convicted pirates are now in detention in 12 countries, more than half of them in Somalia, according to Yury Fedotov, executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODOC).

Kenya is trying 69 suspected pirates and has convicted 50 and the Seychelles has convicted 22, Fedotov told the Security Council. He added that the trials "pose a heavy burden for countries in the region."

"Combating the problem of piracy is a major priority for the Security Council," said Mr Mark Lyall Grant, the British ambassador and president of the council for November.

He said the council had "agreed that the naval operations on their own would not fully address the issue of piracy.

"It is also important to tackle the root causes of piracy and that those root causes are addressed on the land," he said.

Meanwhile,
...back at the ranch...
South Africa's foreign ministry said yesterday that two hostages being held in Somalia after their yacht was hijacked by pirates were South African citizens.

"The two other people who were on the boat have been confirmed to be South African nationals," foreign ministry front man Malusi Mogale told AFP.

The ministry said in a statement that "two South African citizens were kidnapped by suspected Somali pirates from a yacht at a location in the Indian Ocean."
Posted by:Fred

#9  I see no reason to destroy villages and kill the women and children there. But it might reduce recidivism if the pirates themselves tended to disappear along with their boats.
Posted by: lotp   2010-11-11 18:14  

#8  Auto-Bartender is gonna be mighty cross with you two boys ...
Posted by: Steve White   2010-11-11 11:26  

#7  And napalm. Don't forget the napalm...
Posted by: tu3031   2010-11-11 10:55  

#6  Use a Q-ship to assemble the cliches, then arc-light them with F-150s packed with WillyPete.
Posted by: Goldies Every Damn Where   2010-11-11 09:22  

#5  
Can you imagine the international uproar of seeing the poor, innocent dead women and children from these helpless African villages, lying about broken and dying in the streets.


Can you imagine how little I care?
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2010-11-11 08:51  

#4  Can you imagine the international uproar of seeing the poor, innocent dead women and children from these helpless African villages, lying about broken and dying in the streets.

You think the Chinese would really care? BTW they are looking for naval ports to protect their overseas trade routes. I see two interests converging.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2010-11-11 08:15  

#3  No one has the courage to attack their nests. Can you imagine the international uproar of seeing the poor, innocent dead women and children from these helpless African villages, lying about broken and dying in the streets. The brutal rape, torture and murder by their own kind is viewed in gentlemanly circles as an acceptable cultural phenomenon, a tribal right as it were. The laying waste to their hives by former western oppressors is racist and unacceptable. Like the rest back home, these people too, must be socialized through deference and entitlement.
Posted by: Besoeker   2010-11-11 05:47  

#2  Just blow up the whole towns that support these jerks.
Posted by: Water Modem   2010-11-11 02:53  

#1  "Piracy is a menace that is outpacing efforts by the international community to stem it,"

If those "efforts" weren't so pathetic, maybe they could stem it. As long as they pirates continue to be paid, they will continue doing it.

1. Stop paying them. 2. Start sinking them.
Posted by: crosspatch   2010-11-11 01:20  

00:00