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NATO Warships Ready To Tackle Piracy Off Somalia

Issue 353
Front Page
Index
News Headlines
Message Of The UN Resident Humanitarian Coordinator To Somalis
Local and Regional Affairs
French Launch Offensive On Pirates Ahead Of UN Flotilla
104 Children Released From Prison In Somaliland Steps Taken To Protect Children's Rights In Justice Proceedings
Rising Food Prices And War - Somalis Cannot Afford To Eat
Envoy Hopes For Somalia Peace Progress At Summit
FAO Director-General Underlines The Need To Convene A World Food Summit On Food Security
COTE D'IVOIRE : Election Board Suspends Voter Registration
New Name New Commitment For AACNA, Now ARDAA
Korean Survey Team To Leave For Somalia Next Week
Ethiopian Journalists Detained, Charged Over Misidentification
Kenya Falls In Annual Press Freedom Rankings
25 Foreign Students Arrested In Hyderabad
Sudan To Skip IGAD Meet Over Arms Controversy
United Nations And America Seek Extension For Ethiopian Troops In Somalia
Editorial
 
Gen. Powell's Courage
Barack Obama For President
Features & Commentry
The Muslim World And The Global Crisis
The Word And The Way To A Better World:
Launch Of Innovative Jewish-Somali Project On Tuesday, October 28 th , 2008

Opinion

Pakistan 's Forgotten Ghetto Residents
It's Time To Take On The Gangsters Of The Sea
Thinking Aloud: Dreamland, Puntland And Fatherland

 

There have been 199 incidents of piracy worldwide this year

BRUSSELS , October 23, 2008 — NATO warships are in place off the Somali coast to tackle rampant piracy in the waters, and are ready to escort UN aid vessels under threat, a spokesman for the alliance's naval command said Friday.

"The boats are in the area. They have started their deterrent role," a spokesman at NATO's naval command in Naples , Italy said by telephone, adding that the three vessels "would escort UN ships on request".

The ships -- an Italian destroyer and British and Greek frigates which form NATO's operation Allied Provider -- "may use force" under their rules of engagement and in line with international law, a statement said.

They will help escort UN World Food Programme (WFP) food shipments, whose cargo is a tempting target for pirates, until the European Union can launch its own operation, probably in December.

The WFP ships 30,000-35,000 tonnes of aid into Somalia each month.

On Thursday, a maritime watchdog said that Somali pirates were now responsible for nearly a third of all reported attacks on ships, often taking hostages and using high levels of violence.

The International Maritime Bureau said 63 of the 199 piracy incidents recorded worldwide in the first nine months of this year occurred in the waters off war-ravaged Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden .

The figure is almost double that of the same period last year.

Also Thursday, the French navy arrested nine suspected pirates and handed them over to authorities in the breakaway Somali region of Puntland.

French marines in the Gulf of Aden arrested the men when their patrol intercepted two boats on Wednesday in international waters about 100 nautical miles (185 kilometres) off the Somali coast.

They found small arms and anti-tank weapons and equipment used to board ships on the vessels, said a statement from the French military in Paris .

NATO's top commander, US General John Craddock, said the operation is proof of the military alliance's ability to rapidly react to crises around the globe.

It "signifies NATO's continued relevance and willingness to 'step in' and 'step up' to threats of all descriptions -- in this case the persistent threat of piracy," he said in a statement from his headquarters in Mons , Belgium .

Piracy is rife and well organized in the region where Somalia's northeastern tip juts into the Indian Ocean, preying on a key maritime route leading to the Suez Canal through which an estimated 30 percent of the world's oil transits.

The pirates operate high-powered speedboats and are heavily armed, sometimes holding ships for weeks until they are released for large ransoms paid by governments or owners.

On October 9, the EU announced that its mission -- with ships from Belgium , Cyprus , France , Germany , Lithuania , the Netherlands , Spain , Sweden and possibly Britain -- would be run from a headquarters at Northwood, north of London .

Russia and India have also sent ships to the area on anti-piracy duties.

Source: AFP

 


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