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Issue 483 -- 30 Apr - 6th May 2011

Front Page

Somaliland News

News Headlines

Erigabo’s Mayor Won’t Run Again For Same Office

Mobile Courts Speed Up Justice In Somaliland

Local and Regional Affairs

India To Have A Law On Piracy

27 Emerge Finalists In CNN Multi-Choice African Journalist Contest

Ethiopia: Power Network Links To Sudan, Djibouti Finalized

Number Of Somali Refugees Grows Sharply In 2011

Tensions On Libya-Tunisia Border Stem Outflow Of Refugees

US Teen Once Held In Kuwait Challenges No-Fly List
Answering The Call For Peace And Security In Somalia

Editorial

Yemeni President, Qatar And Al-Jazeera

Features & Commentary

Yoder & Sons: Somaliland Extends Warm Welcome

Grotto Galleries Show Early Somali Life

Ethiopia's PM Calls Egyptian Elites "Racists"

Somaliland Born Punk Singer Dies At 53

One Man’s Pirate Is Another’s Coast Guard

Somalia: Pirates And Terrorists Demand More

International News

Opinion

1969 Military Coup In Somalia Part LXXIV

Somalia: The U.N. Fails To Take Control Of The “Transition”

Al-Qa'ida And Its Affiliates

 

India To Have A Law On Piracy

New Delhi, India, April 30, 2011 – Faced with repeated instances of piracy in the high seas and Indian soldiers' well-being at stake, India is working on not just a new domestic law against piracy but also negotiating with the littoral states of Somalia and some independent ones within it.

The law, according to senior officials has been in the works for some months now to ensure that acts of piracy do not go unpunished because of logistical, legal or diplomatic issues. The ministries of shipping, external affairs, defense, law and home affairs are working in close cooperation on a legislation that will put together some of the vital points of the international laws against piracy, provisions of the IPC and the admiralty laws. It will however not be of any help in the negotiation process after Indians aboard a ship have been taken hostage which, according to experts in the field, often proves to be a major hurdle especially when the liners belong to smaller shipping companies.

"Currently, our domestic laws do not even define piracy. So it is difficult to try the 120-odd pirates who are at present in our custody. The importance of international cooperation is immense. The reason we are trying to involve countries like Kenya, Tanzania and Seychelles is because if our navy captures pirates in the Sea of Aden, it is hardly feasible for them to bring them all the way back to be tried and prosecuted. Impunity is the biggest bane of piracy and it is important to resolve that," explained a senior official involved with the process of both the drafting of the law and the international negotiations.

Many countries have already put together a law and have an understanding with the nations surrounding Somalia on the prosecution of pirates as per a resolution adopted in the United Nations Security Council. Seychelles has an agreement with Somalia based on which they can try pirates and send them back home to serve the punishment in some of the independent states like Puntland and Somaliland within Somalia. India too is trying to negotiate with these states.

Officials say it is a matter of some relief that no Indian-flagged ship has ever been targeted by pirates but the government does not want to leave any stone unturned to tackle the menace.

Source: The Times of India




 


 



 



 

 


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