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In Somalia, Piracy Is An Attractive Career Option

Issue 380

Front Page

News Headlines

Berbera Port Official Denies That Ship Was Hijacked

Gaaroodi Establishes Schools In Salahley

Somaliland Delegation Goes To Djibouti

Upper House Committee Mediates Ceelbardaale Conflict

Somaliland Student Breaks Record

Former's President's Wife Passes Away

HAVOYOCO Provides HIV/AIDS Training

On the Agenda: De Facto States in Brussels

Local and Regional Affairs

EU Press Release

Saving Somaliland

Tackling Pirates The Hard Way

Postcard From Somaliland: The Obama Restaurant & Cafe

Patients Throng At RCA Medical Camp In Somaliland

Social Partners' Consultative Workshop On Development Interim Decent Work Country Programme For Somaliland

Nearly 20 Mln Need Urgent Help In Horn Of Africa

Somaliland Arrests More Pirates

Somalia: Eritrea Says It Does Not Want to Intervene

Hard Line Insurgent Group Vows to Increase Attacks on Somali Government
U.S. Calls Off ‘Suicide Mission’ to Rescue Pirate Hostages
Mps Demand Compensation For Somalia Waters

Arsenal Fan Hangs Himself In Kenya

Bintel Inks Deal With Almoayed Systems Group To Implement Microsoft Dynamics NAV

Russia Proposes International Pirate Court

Editorial

Somaliland’s Sellout Foreign Policy

Features & Commentary

The Making Of A Minnesota Suicide Bomber

European Demand Grows For Khat High

Response to the University of North Florida Student’s Disquisition about Somalia!

Who Are the Somali Pirates?

The Somali Anomaly: Bringing Order To The Epicenter Of Chaos

Nubiart - A Different Perspective On The Afrikan World

Study Reveals Emerging African Immigrant Market Segment

The Pirate Hunters

Right To Convert Spotlighted Again In Egypt

International News

 

Earthquake Strikes Off UAE Coast

Thousands Flee Pakistan's Swat, But Many More Left Behind

Obama: Swine Flu Not As Virulent As Feared

Pope Expresses Respect For Islam During Jordan Visit

Opinion

Somaliland Mediation Requires A Common Will For Peace And Reconciliation

President Is Now Threat To Somaliland’s Peace And Stability

Somalia: Somaliland Individuals Perform Exotic Belly Dances

The Political Legacy Of Mohamed Ibrahim Egal (The Seventh Anniversary Of The Death Of Beloved Late President)

Creating The Conditions For Free And Fair Election In Somaliland: Challenges And Obstacles

Somaliland Independence Day 18th May: A Day That Moves The World
Iran’s Classified Nuclear Science

By Gwen Thompkins

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Third in a series

Members of the Somaliland coast guard patrol the waters off Berbera. The coast guard relies on informants onshore to monitor and alert them to suspicious activity along its shores.

Morning Edition, May 6, 2009 · It is called Somalia, but to most of the world it could easily be renamed the Land of Pirates. Havoc on the high seas has become routine off the coast of this East African nation, with scores of hijackings so far this year. Last month, Navy SEALs rescued an American merchant captain after Somali pirates raided the Maersk Alabama as it was making its way around the Horn of Africa to deliver aid.

For nearly 20 years, Somalia has endured political chaos and bloodshed. The impoverished country's 10 million people are living without a formal economy or a functioning central government.

But, known for their pragmatism, they survive.

For many Somalis, choosing a line of business is the most practical decision of all. What works is right, and what doesn't work is wrong. That is why piracy has taken hold in the country: It's a multimillion-dollar industry that works.

'A Pirate Until I Die'

"I'll be a pirate until I die. We are not animals. We are human. We are normal people. We share with the people," says a pirate who goes by the name Abshir Abdullahi Abdi and the nickname "Boya."

Boya, from the Puntland region of Somalia, says he knows piracy is tearing at the seams of traditional Somali values. But he says he places more value on the money — and the mouths it can feed.

"We understand what we're doing is wrong. But hunger is more important than any other thing," he says.

To understand why piracy works in Somalia, it helps to know some basics about the place.

Roughly speaking, Somalia is shaped like the numeral 7. But the nation isn't half as lucky.

On the top of the 7 is Somaliland, which is on the Gulf of Aden. Somaliland calls itself an independent republic and steers clear of the commotion in the other regions. It has had fewer problems with pirates, in part because there is peace in Somaliland. The region also has a small coast guard.

On the corner of the 7 is Puntland, which is on both the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean. Puntland means "Land of Spices." But the region is better known for human trafficking and piracy. Most hijacked ships are moored off Puntland.

And at the bottom of the 7 — and fully on the Indian Ocean — is an area known simply as The South. The capital, Mogadishu, is here, as are most of the Islamists fighting the current president.

Pirate Haven In Puntland

Many in Puntland's government are said to be in league with the pirates. And with more than a dozen hijacked ships off the Puntland coast, piracy clearly has some local support.

Fishing villages in the area have been devastated by illegal trawlers and waste dumping from industrialized nations. Coral reefs are reportedly dead. Lobster and tuna have vanished. Malnutrition is high.

Sometimes doing a bad thing is the only way to improve the situation for yourself and the people you love, says a pirate known as "Milk Sucker" — who also goes by the name Abdul Rashid Osman.

His nickname suggests he became a pirate at a very young age. And it paid off. Pirate money got his siblings out of southern Somalia and gave him a different life in neighboring Kenya.

Sequestered in a Nairobi hotel room for fear of being discovered by either the police or fellow pirates, Milk Sucker says he worked his way up from indigent lobster fisherman to leading an attack boat in hijackings.

He says he will never go back to piracy. "I got my share," he says.

Now, he says he wants to move to the West and maybe work in a chicken-processing plant.

"If I were educated when I was in Somalia, then I could work at offices. I cannot do this job, and I cannot start education. What I can do is cut chickens. This is my way," he says.

To Catch A Pirate

Rashid Abdi Sheik is a Somalia analyst for the International Crisis Group in Nairobi, Kenya; he is also Somali. Rashid offers a pragmatic remedy for piracy off Somalia. He says it takes a pirate to stop a pirate — the same way it takes a computer hacker to stop a hacker. Rashid recommends deputizing former pirates from Puntland.

"These are people who know the sea. … They are bright, successful, smart and courageous, as well. This is the right material for making a coast guard. So why should we not do it?" he says.

But the pirates interviewed for this report say they have little incentive to work against their brothers on the high seas — that is, unless the price is right.

Source: NPR

 


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