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Africa Horn | |
World Bank: Somali piracy likely to return | |
2013-04-12 | |
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The report noted that a long term solution is "first and foremost political". It said, "Pirates rely on onshore support to conduct negotiations and to secure safe access to coastal territories. In turn, politically powerful figures capture large portions of the profits associated with piracy," it added, calculating that between $315-385 million has been paid in ransoms since 2005. But the cost to world trade is higher still, the report said, noting that while an estimated $53 million was paid on average annually in ransoms since 2005, with an estimated $18 billion yearly loss to the world economy in terms of increased cost of trade. | |
Posted by:ryuge |
#3 Bullshit. Yeah, what Barbara said. Although I would couch the solution as economic - as long as being a pirate is a good job, there will be pirates. Killing every goddamn one is certainly a way to raise the costs. |
Posted by: SteveS 2013-04-12 22:04 |
#2 "The report noted that a long term solution is "first and foremost political"." Bullshit. The long-term solution is to kill every goddam one of them you find and leave them for shark food. Sharks don't have a sophisticated palate - they'll eat just about any flesh. |
Posted by: Barbara 2013-04-12 20:58 |
#1 a high mortality rate might change that |
Posted by: Frank G 2013-04-12 20:29 |