Issue 376
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Washington, April 09, 2009 –
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Thursday the United States is
trying to recruit additional countries to join anti-piracy naval
operations along the African east coast in the wake of this week's
pirate attack on a U.S.-flagged cargo ship. Clinton vowed to bring the
hijackers of that ship to justice.
Obama administration officials are working to augment the international
anti-piracy task force off the Somali coast, even as efforts continue to
free the American captain still held by pirates on a lifeboat from the
container ship.
At a State Department press event, Clinton called those holding ship
captain Richard Phillips nothing more than criminals. She said numerous
U.S. assets including the Navy and Federal Bureau of Investigation are
being brought to bear to end the hostage situation and bring the pirates
to justice.
An anti-piracy resolution by the U.N. Security Council in December
authorized countries around the world to deploy patrol vessels in
anti-piracy operations off Somalia and warships from at least a dozen
countries - including the United States, Russia, China, India and Japan
-- are currently deployed.
Clinton spoke after concluding a meeting that included the piracy issue
with Defense Secretary Robert Gates and their Australian counterparts.
She said the administration is seeking a 21st-Century response to a
centuries old problem, which should involve more task force contributors
and also address the issue of Somalia's chronic instability.
"We are looking for ways to increase the effectiveness of what we are
doing, including the recruitment of additional partners to be part of
the surveillance work that is done. But we also understand that the
instability in Somalia is a contributing factor to those who take to the
seas in order to board ships, hijack them, intimidate and threaten their
crews, and then seek ransom," she said.
The incident involving the container ship Maersk Alabama began Wednesday
when pirates boarded the vessel some 500 kilometers off the Somalia
coast. The 20-man crew regained control of the Danish-owned,
U.S.-flagged ship. But captain Phillips was taken hostage - an apparent
voluntary act to spare other crew members - as the pirates fled aboard a
lifeboat.
A tense confrontation has continued since, with a U.S. Navy destroyer on
the scene and negotiators led by the FBI talking to the pirates. Defense
Secretary Gates was sparing in his remarks about the situation, given
the sensitivity of the case. "We are monitoring the situation very
closely. The safe return of the captain is the top priority. We
obviously have a naval presence in the area and other assets. And we are
obviously looking at our options. But again foremost in our minds is the
safety of the captain," he said.
The United Nations says Somali pirates carried out at least 120 attacks
on ships last year and netted combined ransom payoffs of about $150
million dollars.
The rate of hijackings slowed early this year as international
patrolling increased in the relatively narrow Gulf of Aden, but there
has been a surge of attacks in recent days in the Indian Ocean far off
the Somali coast.
Over the past week, pirates have seized a German cargo ship, a French
yacht, a Taiwanese fishing vessel and a Yemeni tugboat. The seized
American ship had been bound for Mombassa, Kenya with a load of relief
supplies for the U.N. World Food Program.
Source: VOA
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