Pirates In Somalia Threaten World Trade
29 September 2008 For Immediate Release
Pirates In Somalia Threaten
Lives Of Seafarers And The Security Of World
Trade
Inadequate Response By Governments And Their
Naval Forces Is Unacceptable Says International Shipping
Industry
The international shipping industry
(represented by BIMCO, ICS/ISF, INTERCARGO and INTERTANKO
and the International Transport Workers’ Federation) is
dismayed by recent comments, attributed to leaders of the
Coalition Task Force operating in the Gulf of Aden, that it
is not the job of navy forces to protect merchant ships and
their crews from increasingly frequent attacks from pirates
operating out of Somalia.
The pirates are now
attacking ships on a daily basis with machine guns and
rocket propelled grenades, and currently holding over 200
seafarers hostage. The pirates are operating with impunity,
and governments stand idly by.
If civil aircraft were
being hijacked on a daily basis, the response of governments
would be very different. Yet ships, which are the lifeblood
of the global economy, are seemingly out of sight and out of
mind. This apparent indifference to the lives of merchant
seafarers and the consequences for society at large is
simply unacceptable.
The shipping industry is utterly
amazed that the world’s leading nations, with the naval
resources at their disposal, are unable to maintain the
security of one of the world’s most strategically
important seaways, linking Europe to Asia via the Red
Sea/Suez Canal.
Since 9/11, the international
shipping industry has spent billions of dollars to comply
with stringent new security requirements, agreed by the
international community to address concerns about terrorism.
Yet when merchant ships – which carry 90% of world trade
and keep the world economy moving - are subject to attack by
violent pirates, the response of many governments is that it
is not their problem and that ships should hire mercenaries
to protect themselves.
The arming of merchant ships,
as suggested by the Task Force, will almost certainly put
the lives of ships’ crews in even greater danger and is
likely to escalate the level of violence employed by the
pirates. It would also be illegal under the national law of
many ships’ flag states and in many of the countries to
which they are trading.
The industry understands
that military resources are stretched and that the Coalition
Task Force is doing what it can, consistent with current
rules of engagement provided by participating
governments.
But the international shipping industry,
in the strongest possible way, urges governments to commit
the necessary navy vessels now, and to ensure they have the
freedom to engage forcefully against any act of piracy in
the Gulf of Aden.
Governments must issue clear rules
of engagement to allow naval forces to intercept and take
appropriate action against these violent pirates, and the
oceangoing ‘motherships’ from which the pirates are
operating, as permitted by UN Security Council Resolution
1816, of 2 June 2008, and existing international law about
the rights of States to repress criminal acts on the high
seas.
Governments must also ensure that these pirates
and armed robbers, who are terrorising the high seas, are
brought to justice in a court of law and are not allowed to
resume their piratical activities unimpeded because of
governments’ unwillingness to take the necessary
action.
There should be no doubt that the situation is
now so serious that major shipping companies, who are
currently negotiating with charterers to avoid transiting
the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea/Suez Canal all together,
will decide to redirect their ships via the Cape of Good
Hope. This would add several weeks to the duration of many
ships’ voyages and would have severe consequences for
international trade, the maintenance of inventories and the
price of fuel and raw materials. This would also affect not
just those countries to which cargoes are destined but all
global seaborne trade, a consequence which, in the current
economic climate, must surely be avoided.
A repeat of the crisis in the early 1970s, when the Suez Canal was closed and shipping was similarly diverted around the Cape of Good Hope, must be prevented at all cost, thus this call for urgent measures now – today and not tomorrow!
It cannot escape notice that the supply of consumer goods – the majority of which are carried from Asia to Europe via this vital sea lane - could be also seriously affected.
The international shipping industry recognises that the United Nations’ International Maritime Organization (IMO), with whom it continues to liaise daily, has acknowledged the massive severity of the problem and has similarly implored the United Nations and the UN Security Council to ensure that appropriate action is taken. But far greater urgency is required by governments and their navies, particularly those in the Coalition Task Force who are in the best position to restore security to this critical trade artery.
We need action, not words or rhetoric. What is at stake are the lives of merchant seafarers and the security of world trade.
End
Notes:
UN Security Council Resolution 1816, adopted on 2 June, permits States co-operating with Somalia's Transitional Federal Government, for a period of six months, to enter the country's territorial waters and use "all necessary means" to repress acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea, in a manner consistent with relevant provisions of international law.
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), Article 105, states ‘On the high seas, or in any other place outside the jurisdiction of any State, every State may seize a pirate ship or aircraft taken by piracy and under the control of pirates, and arrest the persons and seize the property on board’. The rights of States to act against criminal acts at sea is reinforced by the IMO Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Maritime Navigation (SUA Convention).
Since 9/11, shipping companies and their crews have had to comply with the IMO International Ship and Port Facility Security (ISPS) Code, adopted in 2002, and various new cargo security requirements within the context of the World Customs Organization ‘SAFE Framework’. The cost of compliance, aimed at protecting the international community from the risk of terrorism, amounts to billions of dollars.
Additional information about the most recent pirate attacks against ships off Somalia can be found at www.icc-ccs.org/prc/piracyreport.php
General
information about the international shipping industry can be
found at
www.shippingfacts.com