Issue 379
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Held in a Somaliland
jail, a pirate leader says he was forced to take to the high seas in
search of fortune after foreign trawlers wiped out the livelihood of
local fishermen.
Shashank Bengali / MCT
Farah Ismail Eid, 38, is serving a 15-year prison term in Mandhera, for
piracy off Somalia.
By Shashank Bengali
MANDHERA, Somaliland, April 29, 2009 Their exploits have turned the
inky-blue waters of the Indian Ocean into a perilous gantlet for ships
and an unlikely security challenge for world leaders. But behind the
bare brick walls of a desolate former British colonial prison here, five
jailed Somali pirates didn't seem very fearsome at all.
One looked to be in his late 40s, his brambly hair stained a deep henna
orange, his milky eyes staring into the middle distance. A slightly
younger man clutched a faded sarong to his matchstick waist and spoke in
barely a whisper.
The leader of the pirate crew, 38-year-old Farah Ismail Eid, wore such a
hungry look that a visiting government official, unsolicited, folded a
pale $10 bill into his sandpaper palm.
That a few hundred men like these have wreaked so much havoc in the seas
off of East Africa is a testament to the sheer power of guts and greed.
It's also a stark illustration of the all-consuming anarchy ashore in
Somalia, where, after 18 years of conflict, jobs are scarce, guns are
plentiful, men will risk everything for a payday and their government
is too weak and corrupt to stop them.
The men behind bars, however, offered another explanation for piracy.
Their story is also rooted in greed not of their brazen colleagues
with the million-dollar ransoms, they say, but of foreign companies that
they say have profited from Somalia's lawlessness by fishing illegally
in their waters since the 1990s.
In a long interview with McClatchy at the jailhouse in Mandhera, an
austere desert fortress in the autonomous northern region of Somaliland,
where British forces held Italian POWs during World War II, Eid related
what amounts to the pirates' creation myth, in which overfishing by
European and Asian trawlers drove Somalia's coastal communities to ruin
and forced local fishermen to fight for their livelihoods.
"Now the international community is shouting about piracy. But long
before this, we were shouting to the world about our problems," said Eid,
a bony-cheeked former lobsterman with a bushy goatee. "No one listened."
Of course, the pirates' journey from vigilante coast guard to firing
automatic weapons at cruise ships as one band did over the weekend
is a reminder that good intentions don't last long in desperate Somalia.
In 1991, Eid was scavenging for lobsters along the craggy shores of
central Somalia, saving to start a fishing company, when the government
and its security forces were swallowed up in a coup. The country's
endless coastline at nearly 2,000 miles, it's longer than the U.S.
West Coast suddenly became an unguarded supermarket of tuna, mackerel
and other fish.
When huge foreign trawlers suddenly began appearing, the local fishermen
who plied their trade with simple nets and small fiberglass boats were
wiped out, Eid said.
"They fished everything sharks, lobsters, eggs," he recalled. "They
collided with our boats. They came with giant nets and swept everything
out of the sea."
At the outset, fishermen in the ramshackle ports of Puntland,
Somaliland's rowdy neighbor, re-branded themselves as "coast guards."
The first hijackings that Eid remembered came in 1997, when pirates from
the port of Hobyo seized a Chinese fishing vessel and then held a Kenyan
ship for a $500,000 ransom.
"When I heard about this," Eid said, "I was happy."
Eid had sunk his savings into three boats. In 2005, with catches all too
rare and a wife and two children to support, he traded his fishing
equipment for a couple of Kalashnikov rifles and rocket launchers in a
market in the wild-west port of Bossasso.
He and five other fishermen, swathed in camouflage, piled into a
motorized skiff and set off from the village of Garacad. But their motor
was too feeble to catch up to any of the ships they spotted, so after
five sweltering days they returned to shore.
The next year Eid tried with a stronger engine, a German one imported
from Dubai. This time, the novice pirates caught up to a cargo ship and
came face to face with its European crew. But Eid's men couldn't prop
their heavy metal ladder up against the freighter's hull quickly enough
to board the ship. The vessel escaped unmolested.
Global Witness, a London-based group that investigates natural resource
exploitation, agrees that vessels from countries such as France, Spain,
Indonesia and South Korea gobbled up hundreds of millions of dollars'
worth of fish from Somali waters without licenses.
However, experts say that the foreign fishing wasn't necessarily illegal
because the Somali government, even before the coup, didn't delineate
its territorial waters, as international maritime laws require.
"In the early to mid-1990s there was some fishing in those waters that,
if Somalia had a government that was performing its job, would have
demanded licensing fees for," said J. Peter Pham, a piracy expert at
James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va. "But the Somalis never got
around to declaring what was legal and illegal."
Somali officials don't argue with the pirates' version of events only
with their tactics.
"We know they have their grievances," said Abdillahi Mohamed Duale, the
foreign minister of Somaliland, which declared independence from Somalia
in 1991. "But the problem of overfishing has always been there, in the
Caribbean, Latin America and the Indian Ocean. It doesn't mean that you
take the law into your own hands."
Entering this week, there'd been 93 hijack attempts off the coast in
2009, according to the International Maritime Bureau in London 17
fewer than in all of last year. After a tense, five-day standoff this
month ended with U.S. Navy sharpshooters killing three pirates and
rescuing an American ship captain they'd taken hostage, countries
pledged $213 million to bolster the Somali security forces.
In Puntland, the pirates have a comfortably chaotic haven. Markets carry
everything from automatic weapons to spare batteries for satellite
phones, standard equipment for any seagoing bandit. A regional
government claims to rule the area, but many suspect that the president,
Abdirahman Mohamed Farole, is on the take from pirates, which Farole
denies.
According to Eid and others, some officers from Somalia's erstwhile
marine corps and coast guard, which patrolled the shores skillfully
until the civil war, are training pirate groups in navigation and other
seafaring techniques.
"If 20 pirate groups go to sea, one will succeed" in capturing a ship,
Eid said. "Nineteen will fail, but they'll keep trying. They have all
the equipment and support they need."
Somaliland says it's cracking down on pirates. Four groups of pirates
26 men in all have been arrested, and three of the groups are serving
15- to 20-year prison sentences.
Last August, Somaliland authorities raided a seaside guesthouse and
captured Eid, who'd moved there and was posing as a mechanic. He and
four others were charged with weapons possession and plotting a
hijacking, and swiftly sentenced to 15-year prison terms despite having
never carried out an attack.
"We are afraid this piracy could spread to Somaliland," said Yusuf Essa,
Somaliland's vice minister of justice. "That's why we have to give harsh
sentences."
Nevertheless, Essa, a former high school teacher, seemed impressed with
Eid's story. After listening for over an hour, he rose to shake the
younger man's hand and handed him $10. Afterward, he and the
silver-haired warden agreed that Eid probably would spend the money on
khat, a narcotic leaf that Somali men chew to get high.
Source: McClatchy News Service
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