Philippines offers training for Somali Coast Guard
The Philippine president offered her country’s help in training the Somali coast guard, saying Tuesday she fears another surge in pirate attacks off Somalia that have targeted ships with hundreds of Filipino crew.
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who was attending the African Union
summit in Libya, expressed fear that pirate attacks will pick up as the
East African monsoon was about to end.“This is one issue where it is crucial for Africa to work together to
bring peace and order in the affected areas off the coast of Somalia,”
she said in a speech to Filipino workers in Libya, a copy of which was
released in Manila.The Philippines supplies about 30 percent of the world’s 1.2 million
merchant sailors, and 42 Filipino seafarers remain in the hands of
Somali pirates. Another 347 have been freed by pirates since 2006,
according to the Department of Foreign Affairs.In her meeting with Somali President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed on the
sidelines of the summit, Arroyo said the Philippines has expertise in
human resources development and offered to help train Somalia’s coast
guard and government officials.She said the building of strong institutions was one way to help Somalia fight piracy.
Piracy has increased in the Gulf of Aden — a crucial shipping route in
and out of the Suez Canal — and elsewhere off the coast of Somalia.
Attacks have more than doubled in the first half of 2009 compared to
the same period a year ago, the International Maritime Bureau said.Out of 240 pirate attacks worldwide, 130 took place off Somalia, it said.
Somalia has had no effective central government since 1991, and the
country’s interim government has been embroiled in a struggle with
Islamist extremists with suspected al-Qaida links.Source: Associated Press
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Indian shipping firms have asked the government to come up with new anti-piracy strategies following a recent jump in attacks. The shipping industry has said it needs protection form pirates, especially in the dangerous waters around Somalia.
US Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood today reminded mariners about the importance of taking necessary precautions and implementing best practices in the wake of recent attacks on the Harriett and Maersk Alabama off the coast of Somalia. “These ships’ successful defence… Read at US warns seafarers against pirate attacks after Maersk Alabama
(usatoday) Pirates have stepped up their attacks off the coast of Somalia this year despite a large international naval flotilla designed to protect merchant shipping in the Horn of Africa region. Source
(marinelink) Pirate activity has increased recently off the coast of Somalia with four attempted attacks occurring on motor vessels in the Gulf of Aden since Sept. 19. Source
A Russian warship has escorted a commercial ship in distress through the pirate-infested waters off the coast of Somali, a Navy spokesman said on Thursday.
Piracy attacks off the Somali coast are set to double this year as lucrative ransoms and difficulties policing vast swathes of ocean lure increasing numbers of pirates onto the seas, the International Maritime Bureau (IMB) said on Tuesday. The Kuala Lumpur-based centre said there have been 200 attacks off the
(Washington Post) Eleven suspected pirates from Somalia have been brought to the United States to face piracy and other charges for attacks on two U.S.
(voanews) The International Maritime Bureau in London reports piracy incidents on the high seas increased nearly 40 percent in 2009 from a year ago. Pirate activities off the coast of Somalia accounted for more than half of all attacks worldwide. Source
The Netherlands has agreed to a Nato request to deploy a submarine off the coast of Somalia to combat piracy.
Pirates preying on commercial ships off the coast of Somalia are shifting attacks from the tightly patrolled Gulf of Aden to the Indian Ocean, the head of the European Union’s anti-piracy force said. Sea bandits are straying from the Gulf of Aden, the choke point leading to the Suez Canal,
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