Somalia

  • Rich Energy Targets helps to keep Piracy in the Public Spotlight

    The release of the Captain Phillips movie starring Tom Hanks in October 2013 and the hijacking of two Americans off the coast of Nigeria have brought more public attention to the oldest of all maritime risks: piracy. While piracy has been a concern in the maritime industry for centuries, a new hotspot has emerged off the coast of West Africa in the Gulf of Guinea. Specifically the industry is concerned about attacks occurring in the territorial waters of Benin, Nigeria, Togo and the Ivory Coast. Over the past years, there have been more widespread and violent accidents in this region of the world. In fact, over the summer of 2013, 22 West African states signed a code of conduct regarding piracy prevention and armed robbery against ships. United States Navy ships accompanying the EU Naval Force off Somalia have created an effective ‘international recommended transit corridor.’  Several West African leaders are calling for a similar floating police force in the Gulf of Guinea, one of the most active oil transport and energy hubs in the world today. 
    At the same time, shipping companies are continuing to report piracy incidents in the Gulf of Aden and the Strait of Malacca in Southeast Asia. Piracy attacks have dropped significantly off the coast of Somalia due to various factors, including active military action, land-based anti-piracy interventions and the increasing use of armed guards on board of ships. However, Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty (AGCS), a leading marine insurer, maintains that this region is still far from safe from pirate attacks. The industry sometimes likens the issue of piracy to a game of ‘whack-a-mole’.
    Once one area quiets down a little, there is another hotspot emerging. So overall, it continues to be of great concern to our clients and with that to us.

    Changing business models of pirates
    Types of piracy in different regions of the world vary. This is important since the management best practices issued by the International Maritime Organization are still focused on the type of piracy that prevailed off the coast of Somalia. Different types of piracy include:

    • Opportunistic armed robbery occurs when a vessel is approaching or anchored off ports or when ship-to-ship transfers take place (e.g. oil or gas cargo). Usually pirates are after valuables, IT equipment, personal belongings and the cash often kept by the ship’s captain for conducting normal business in foreign countries.
    • Cargo theft, mainly fuel oil theft, occurs when vessels are hijacked for several days and oil is transferred to a smaller vessel. This usually involves a criminal element and some maritime insider knowledge.
    • Kidnapping is usually associated with the offshore oil industry and the instability of the Niger Delta. Typically, robbery is the main intent.


    The main difference between traditional piracy in Somalia and the new wave of piracy emerging in West Africa is that the latter is usually more aggressive and violent and is aimed at obtaining valuables. The pirates often use poles, grapples and ladders and come with two to three skiffs or speedboats.

    Piracy frequency numbers
    Piracy is a major concern for the marine insurance industry. For instance, the West African territorial waters are excluded from the Hull War trading area and ship owners need to arrange insurance coverage for sailing into such areas in advance. A recent joint study by the International Criminal Police Organization, United Nations office on Drugs and Crime and the World Bank states that from 2005 to 2012, 179 ships were successfully hijacked off the Horn of Africa, primarily off the coast of Somalia. Another study, called ‘Pirate Trails’, using data and evidence from interviews with former pirates, government officials, bankers and others involved in piracy, explores the finances behind piracy and claims that over $339 million in ransom was paid during that period of time.
    So what can shipping companies do to prepare for and mitigate the risk of piracy? Tim Donney, Global Head of Marine Risk Consulting at Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty, has some tips for operators shipping in piracy prone waters:

    • Avoid using very high frequency (VHF) communication, but use secure satellite telephone or email instead
    • Vet all communications with external parties and take care when communicating information on cargo onboard to third parties
    • Avoid tendering while not immediately conducting cargo operations
    • Change routes up occasionally to avoid predictability when a vessel is in the region frequently and following a regular trade route.
    • Piracy risk is the greatest at night (the highest risks are between 2200-0300hrs and weekends, Friday to Sunday are the most common days) and increased vigilance is needed.  (Operating only in day light hours is not an option for ships.)
    • Prior to transiting the Gulf of Aden, alert the Maritime Security Centre for the Horn of Africa (MSCHOA) and advise of your voyage plans. Travel in assigned Transit Groups and utilize the International Recommended Transit Corridor (IRTC), which will allow optimal coordination of naval warships that are operating in the Gulf of Aden.
    • Do not refuel in the piracy hotspot areas.  For instance, try to refuel in Cape Town in South Africa instead of in the West African region
    • Follow the guidelines contained within IMO’s Best Management Practices IV, such as ‘hardening your vessel’ by installing barbed wire to protect the hull and create an effective Citadel aboard ship. 
    • For vessels transiting West Africa, follow the Guidelines for the Gulf of Guinea, which have been created by Intertanko, BIMCO, NATO and other maritime organizations.

    The Use of Armed Guards
    The use of armed guard is a legal challenge. In contrast to the international waters off Somalia, coastal states in West Africa do not allow foreign armed guards to enter their territorial waters. Instead, the local navy or army must be used, a process bringing with it lots of uncertainty with respect to naval experience, being able to adapt to critical situations, training and reliability of people sent onboard.
    Former US Assistant Secretary of State, Andrew Shapiro stated: “The ultimate security measure a commercial ship can adopt is the use of privately contracted armed security teams. The reason for this is simple: to date, no ship with an armed security team onboard has been successfully pirated.”  Yet, there have been instances where fishermen were mistaken for pirates and were inadvertently killed, such as the incident off the coast of India in 2012.
    Generally, insurers like Allianz do not endorse or condemn the use of armed guards.  If clients choose to use them, then insurers recommend using those that form part of the Security Association for the Maritime Industry (SAMI). This organization certifies maritime security providers worldwide and its members comprise more than 180 security providers, consultants, trainers and maritime security, hardware and technology manufacturers worldwide.

    The Root Cause is on Land
    Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty has already propagated that more nation building is required in Somalia back in 2011. In Somalia as well as West Africa, the root cause for piracy is the poverty on land and the socio-economic realities of some of the affected countries. One of the driving forces behind piracy in Nigerian waters has been the failure to address the rampant black oil market, making theft a lucrative business. Pirates have become more sophisticated converting fishing trawlers into makeshift oil tankers or bringing some of the captured vessels close enough to the shore in order to siphon the oil into barrels to be sold on the black market. The US obtains 15 percent of its oil supply from this region, so the pirates see ample opportunity for profit here.
    Tim Donney stresses: “You have to address the causes and not just the symptoms. And while we are mainly dealing with the transport on water, we need to recognize that the long-term solutions lie on land – whether we are talking about Somalia, West Africa or any other piracy prone area of the world.”
    Another contributing factor is the lack of a legal definition of Piracy and lack of legal jurisdiction for prosecution of piracy. The pirate ring leader Muse, who was captured by the US Navy in the Captain Phillips movie, was recently convicted in US federal court for Hijacking, Hostage Taking, & Armed Robbery, but not Piracy. This is because there is no legal definition of Piracy. Also, there is the lack of jurisdiction. Initially, pirates were being tried in Kenya, but the Kenyan government has since taken the position that these are Somali citizens, that attacked ships that are under foreign flags in international waters. So, how does Kenya have any jurisdiction or responsibility to prosecute these pirates? It is reported that over 1,500 pirates have been captured and released by naval ships because of the lack of any legal authority or jurisdiction for their detention or prosecution. 
    In short, Piracy is a highly complex international problem that continues to exist as long as large income inequalities, poverty and political instability continue to exist. Its face might be changing, but we are still talking about the age-old risk.



    (As published in the 1Q 2014 edition of Maritime Professional - www.maritimeprofessional.com)

     

  • crude oil) and the growing crime of kidnap would imply that life on the ocean wave is not like an ocean-bird set free. Indeed, these are dangerous times. Somalia, Horn of Africa & Indian Ocean Somali piracy, from 2008 onwards, grew to unprecedented levels in the following years. In the vacuum of effective

  • have continued to sharpen their aim taken at a longstanding maritime problem: What is the appropriate response to piracy? As attacks have shifted from Somalia to West Africa, the issue remains at top of mind. Armed guards have proven to be a successful deterrent against attacks. Ship finance and registry

  • land level ship construction facility project at Newport News Shipbuilding, on Alaskan pipeline studies, on rehabilitation of the Port of Kismayo in Somalia, and other port and industrial projects

  • problematic for international shipping, and their ubiquity is not unfounded; Somali based Piracy cost the international community over $6bn in 2012 alone. Somalia is not the only source of Piracy either, and it is easy to see just how much these attacks impact on world shipping. However, the past few years has

  • , we still have incidents but we do not have as many of the large-scale hijackings, because they don’t have a safe haven. What happened off the coast of Somalia, and in some cases in the South China Sea, they could make them disappear, or they had someplace they could home them until they got their ransom

  • occurs in the Somali Current. Stacked jets of currents with opposing directions are found at depth. In addition, a large intense gyre spins up off Somalia over a month’s duration. Called the Great Whirl, the gyre reaches 500 km wide. It persists for three months and then dissipates as fast as it

  • oil rigs to computer networks, they expose considerable weaknesses that hackers can exploit. For example, it was discovered that pirates off the coast of Somalia and other key piracy areas hand pick their shipping targets by tracking online the navigation track of the vessel through AIS, ECDIS and radar. In

  • , peaking at a rate of increase of 10 percent per year in 2011. Traffic increased in every ocean during the 20 years of the study, except off the coast of Somalia, where increasing piracy has almost completely halted commercial shipping since 2006. In the Indian Ocean, where the world’s busiest shipping lanes

  • , peaking at rate of increase of 10 percent per year in 2011. Traffic went up in every ocean during the 20 years of the study, except off the coast of Somalia, where increasing piracy has almost completely halted commercial shipping since 2006. In the Indian Ocean, where the world’s busiest shipping lanes

  • Indian Ocean HRA is dominated by the Northeast Monsoon, which brings moderate winds and sea states to the northern Arabian Sea and along the east coast of Somalia. These conditions do not preclude piracy, but despite 26 advisory notices being issued by UKMTO, there have been no confirmed piracy incidents. Of

  • , focusing on the target rich areas off Mombasa and Dar es Salaam, is very real. Coalition naval operations continue along the north eastern coast of Somalia, any PAGs that do venture into the open ocean run the risk of detection and disruption long before they reach the shipping lanes. Dryad maintains

  • MR Feb-24#13  of piracy returning around Somalia.
Business Interruption
Roundin)
    February 2024 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 13

    of tensions between the US and China in the South China Sea (which could impact trade routes further) and even some signs of piracy returning around Somalia. Business Interruption Rounding out the top ? ve risks for marine and shipping companies is Business Interruption at 21% falling one spot from

  • MR May-21#14  
ularly in waters off Somalia and now shifting to the)
    May 2021 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 14

    , This has led to a growing number and Washington, DC. Later, the hot topic was piracy, partic- of container shipping casualties ularly in waters off Somalia and now shifting to the Gulf of and places crew members and re- Guinea. For the past year, there have been articles concern- sponse personnel in

  • MT Jan-20#54  iWBMSh Integrated Multibeam 
Somalia and the UK’s Ice Patrol)
    January 2020 - Marine Technology Reporter page: 54

    , NORBIT announced the recent sup- berland on counter-piracy patrol off Mass., at 10 Cordage Park Circle, Suite ply of iWBMSh Integrated Multibeam Somalia and the UK’s Ice Patrol Ship, 222. It will be the company’s ? rst of- Survey Systems to Peel Ports Group. HMS Protector, in Antarctica. ? ce

  • MR Sep-19#21  a  seafood, with Congo, Somalia, 
M? shing and securi-)
    September 2019 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 21

    Africa edia reports about ? nds as well. African waters are Mozambique’s also a major source of the world’s failure to launch a seafood, with Congo, Somalia, M? shing and securi- Guinea and Gambia among the ty ? eet and its subsequent $2 bil- world’s fastest-growing ? sh ex- lion debt default seem

  • MP Q2-19#47  happened off the coast of Somalia,  +INSE)
    May/Jun 2019 - Maritime Logistics Professional page: 47

    hijackings, because they drudgery of seagoing operations, familiarity can breed contempt. don’t have a safe haven. What happened off the coast of Somalia, +INSE

  • MP Q1-19#61  31 18 14 36 33 48
Somalia  7 3 1 5 2
The Congo)
    Jan/Feb 2019 - Maritime Logistics Professional page: 61

    2 4 Bangladesh 12 21 11 3 11 12 India 14 13 13 14 4 6 Colombia 7 2 5 4 6 1 Venezuela 1 1 5 12 11 Gulf of 6 4 1 3 1 Aden Nigeria 31 18 14 36 33 48 Somalia 7 3 1 5 2 The Congo 3 7 5 6 1 6 Global 264 245 246 191 180 201 Totals Source: IMB Credit: EUNAVFOR www.maritimelogisticsprofessional.com 61

  • MP Q4-18#14 , it turns out, is yes. In Somalia, Fridays are days 
14)
    Nov/Dec 2018 - Maritime Logistics Professional page: 14

    from the growing data being ally worse on a given day of the week? sent ashore within the shipping community. The answer, it turns out, is yes. In Somalia, Fridays are days 14 Maritime Logistics Professional November/December 2018 |

  • MT Nov-18#40  this effort was a desire for 
Somalia over a month’s duration)
    November 2018 - Marine Technology Reporter page: 40

    had originated fects of internal wave breaking. tion, a large intense gyre spins up off in the Nordic Seas. Motivating this effort was a desire for Somalia over a month’s duration. Called Full-depth LADCP pro? les are well- more data about mixing in the ocean. the Great Whirl, the gyre reaches 500

  • MT Nov-18#38 , a large intense gyre off Somalia.
Units: Depth(m), Distance(deg)
    November 2018 - Marine Technology Reporter page: 38

    Fig. 5 Fig. 5: LADCP data show the deep extent of the Great Whirl, a large intense gyre off Somalia. Units: Depth(m), Distance(deg). Credit: T. Chereskin (Scripps Inst. Oceanography) https://goo.gl/WsmhuV November/December 2018 38 MTR MTR #9 (34-49).indd 38 MTR #9 (34-49).indd 38 11/27/2018 2:04:44

  • MP Q1-18#62  18 14 36 33
Nigeria
73 15
Somalia 
37561
The Congo
264)
    Jan/Feb 2018 - Maritime Logistics Professional page: 62

    792 Vietnam 12 21 11 3 11 Bangladesh 14 13 13 14 4 India 72546 Colombia 1151 2 Venezuela 64 13 Gulf of Aden 31 18 14 36 33 Nigeria 73 15 Somalia 37561 The Congo 264 245 246 191 180 Global Totals Source: IMB 62 Maritime Logistics Professional January/February 2018 |

  • MR Feb-16#8  from  causes of piracy – off Somalia, most  Ohio’ when they)
    February 2016 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 8

    the root rested in 2013 from the ‘Seaman Guard on merchant vessels is still probably shipping from point A to point B from causes of piracy – off Somalia, most Ohio’ when they could not demonstrate the best of many possible solutions to the scourge of so-called ‘pirates.’ The stakeholders would

  • MR Aug-16#29  Syria, 
Iraq, Eritrea and Somalia. Among these 
activities)
    August 2016 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 29

    , company employees have been using a wide range of activi- ties to assist some 7,000 refugees who have come to Germany from Syria, Iraq, Eritrea and Somalia. Among these activities have been German language The heart of a instruction, the World Café, donation drives, sports and evenings spent prepar- ing

  • MP Q1-16#20  hijacked. Unlike pirates off Somalia who seek ransom, 
important)
    Q1 2016 - Maritime Logistics Professional page: 20

    some parts of the world. In June 2015, the Orkim Harmony ernance and the need for compliant programs, it is even more was hijacked. Unlike pirates off Somalia who seek ransom, important to partner with the right marine insurance carrier. in Southeast Asia, these criminal gangs are targeting ships to So

  • MR Jan-16#18   over $6bn in 2012 alone. Somalia is not  increasingly)
    January 2016 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 18

    tacks has widened, meaning pirates are ily true however, as attacks from pirates While the advent of the car and plane over $6bn in 2012 alone. Somalia is not increasingly attacking any and all ships. continue to increase despite a more con- heralded new eras of transportation, the only source

  • MR Jun-15#23  
pirates off the coast of Somalia and other  with poor)
    June 2015 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 23

    ex- computing and network devices are con- ploit. For example, it was discovered that nected to the internet using serial ports pirates off the coast of Somalia and other with poor security. Devices range from key piracy areas hand pick their shipping simple traf? c items such as stop light targets by

  • MT Nov-14#12  instrument and the 
coast of Somalia, where increasing pi-)
    November 2014 - Marine Technology Reporter page: 12

    it takes the pulse the 20 years of the study, except off the mospheric pollution in the open ocean. to bounce back to the instrument and the coast of Somalia, where increasing pi- The new dataset will provide scien- shape of the pulse when it arrives. The racy has almost completely halted com- tists with

  • MR Dec-14#10 , except off the coast of Somalia, where 
increasing piracy)
    December 2014 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 10

    at a rate of increase of 10 percent per year in 2011. Traffi c increased in every ocean during the 20 years of the study, except off the coast of Somalia, where increasing piracy has almost completely halted commercial shipping since 2006. In the Indian Ocean, where the world’s busiest shipping

  • MP Q4-14#21  the north eastern coast of Somalia, any PAGs that do venture)
    Q4 2014 - Maritime Logistics Professional page: 21

    , focusing on the target rich areas off Mombasa and Dar es Salaam, is very real. Coalition naval operations continue along the north eastern coast of Somalia, any PAGs that do venture into the open ocean run the risk of detection and disruption long before they reach the shipping lanes. Dryad maintains

  • MR Nov-14#14  between 
London, Norway, Somalia, Greece and 
out to)
    November 2014 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 14

    because of its relatively short length. Fast moving and chock full of action, John Guy skill- fully moves us back and forth between London, Norway, Somalia, Greece and out to sea on the waters in between. That’s because while the (? ctional) book ultimately takes the reader through the machinations

  • MR Nov-14#12  areas.
Hostages Remain in Somalia
With just 10 incidents)
    November 2014 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 12

    at anchor or berthed. The report commends the efforts taken by the Indonesian Marine Police in addressing the problem areas. Hostages Remain in Somalia With just 10 incidents reported so far in Somalia this year, there is a risk that international attention will turn away from the 40 hostages

  • MP Q3-14#44  previous hotspot area of Somalia does  this indicate piracy)
    Q3 2014 - Maritime Logistics Professional page: 44

    Age of PiracyÓ of the 1650s to 1730s now resigned to the history books, and a sharp decline in the num-ber of attacks in todayÕs previous hotspot area of Somalia does this indicate piracy is a waning issue? Not according to the IMB Piracy Reporting Centre whose 2014 ÒLive Piracy and Armed RobberyÓ report

  • MR Aug-14#24 . This  is true for Somalia, where many of the original)
    August 2014 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 24

    the local perpe-trators are often the same who commit crimes against local shipping or at least they hail from similar backgrounds. This is true for Somalia, where many of the original pirates were involved in crimi-nal activity against Somali and Yemeni Þ shing vessels. It is also true for the Gulf

  • MR Mar-02#46  and sank off the coast of 
Somalia and 930 passengers were)
    March 2002 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 46

    criteria were formulated after a mar- itime incident in November 1994 when the passenger liner Achille Lauro caught fire and sank off the coast of Somalia and 930 passengers were rescued by the tanker Hawaiian King. But the subsequent increased use of the Inmarsat-A terminal on the Hawaiian King

  • MP Q1-14#27  we 
are talking about Somalia, West Africa or 
any)
    Q1 2014 - Maritime Logistics Professional page: 27

    term solutions lie on land – whether we are talking about Somalia, West Africa or any other piracy prone area of the world.” Another contributing factor is the lack of a legal defi nition of Piracy and lack of legal jurisdiction for prosecution of pira- cy. The pirate ring leader Muse, who was