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PIRACY: The Danger of Escalation

Issue 378

Front Page

News Headlines

Somali Man Charged With Terrorism In Britain.

Somaliland Forces Advance Towards Puntland

Thirty-Five Drown In Latest Smuggling Tragedy In The Gulf Of Aden

Desert locust swarms increase in Yemen and Somaliland

Somaliland: Pirates Arrested Near Berbera

Dubai denies laundering Somali pirates’ money

Local and Regional Affairs

Opposition Supporters Turn Out In Rallies Across Somaliland

Somaliland: Law Makers Enquire About Eastern Regions Fund

Six Points to Save Democracy and Stability in Somaliland

U.S. Embassy Hosts Eastleigh Soccer Tournament

Donors to tackle lawless Somali's woes

Somalia donors gather, but piracy overshadows aid talks

Somali Opposition Leader Wants AU Force To Leave

Somali President: Al Qaeda not Present in Somalia

Mother of Somali Pirate Appeals for Mercy for Her Son

Donors pledge 250 mln dlrs for Somalia- EU official

EU: Stable Somalia key to tackling piracy
Final Communique From The International Conference On Support To The Somali Security Institutions And The AMISOM
Somalia: Running From The Media

Editorial

The International Community’s Anti-Somali Agenda

Features & Commentary

How To Effectively Manage A Crisis But Still Miss The Point

'People over Piracy' Plea to Somalia Donors

Somalia: Aboard a Rudderless Ship

Middle East Talks On Thin Ice

Q&A: ‘It’s Better To Fight The Pirates’

Black In The Age Of Obama

Somalia The Star-Crossed

Adapting Ancient Roman Lessons On Beating Pirates

Pondering Somali Piracy

International News

 

Female Suicide Attackers Kill 58 Near Baghdad Shrine

ANC Wins Absolute Majority In S. Africa Polls

Pentagon Plans Escalation In Horn Of Africa

Iran cleric tells Washington to stop the language of threats

Pentagon To Release Prisoner Abuse Probe Photos

Opinion

Pirates, Al-Qaeda And Arabs Lifting Arms Embargo: Road To Advance Terror In Somalia

What Went Wrong And Caused Bashir Goth To Leave Awdal News?

Struggle For Education & Development In Somaliland’s Periphery: Notes On A Trip To Burco And Las-Anod

Somaliland: Political Turbulence Due To A Constitutional Imperfection

Collateral Damage!!

A document from a hijacked ship contained a 'list of written rules' of pirate conduct.

By Mark Hosenball | NEWSWEEK

Apr 27, 2009

It was a hit with the U.S. public, but president Obama's decision to authorize the Pentagon to kill three Somali pirates who took an American sea captain hostage sent shudders through the world's shipping and insurance industries. Because the pirates are motivated chiefly by money, maritime experts say, they have—at least until now—taken good care of the crews they hold captive. A document retrieved from a ship hijacked last year contained a "list of written rules" of conduct pirates had to follow, according to a maritime security expert who requested anonymity when discussing sensitive material. The document included a series of "punishments" to be imposed on any hijacker who struck a hostage.

Shipping companies and insurers are far more likely to fork over large ransoms if they have confidence that their personnel and cargo will be released unharmed, and while the scourge of piracy has been disruptive, so far there have been virtually no casualties among innocent people. According to estimates, there were 111 pirate attacks off the Somali coast in 2008; 42 were successful, resulting in the capture of 815 seamen. As of last week, according to one estimate, all but 37 had been released, and two had died—one reportedly of illness. Experts say the rate of attacks has increased sharply this year, and "the more [authorities] shoot, the more the pirates will shoot back," says Tom Wilson, a Somalia analyst for the British consulting firm Control Risks.

Protecting the 23,000 merchant vessels sailing annually near the Horn of Africa would require a naval fleet of at least 60 ships, according to U.S. government and private experts; the existing international antipiracy task force has about 20. And attacking the Somali coastal villages where the pirates are based could potentially radicalize generations of Somalis. "That would be a 19th-century solution," says Neil Roberts, a marine insurance expert with Lloyd's Market Association in London. Industry experts say the only solution to piracy is the creation of a viable Somali government back on dry land.

According to industry officials, ransom demands have ranged as high as $25 million—but in most cases they are negotiated down to about $2 million to $3 million, and insurers then pay out claims to the shipping companies. As hijackings have increased in frequency, pirates have become fussier about how their money gets delivered. Initially, said a shipping-industry source who also asked for anonymity, ransoms were often handed off to shady Somali expats in places like Kenya. After Kenyan authorities cracked down, the pirates began insisting on airdrops via parachute into the ocean near Somali coastal villages, where they have cash-counting machines ready. Until the U.S. opened fire, one of the pirates' biggest headaches had been dealing with the sheer volume of money they've collected. Last year, according to an insurance-industry official, one pirate's boat capsized because he had overloaded it with cash.

Source: Newsweek


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