Bold Action Urged As Piracy Escalates
World Community Ponders Response To Increasingly Aggressive Attacks
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Eight Somali pirates sit at the Kenya Ports Authority Port Police station, in Mombasa on Nov. 18, 2008, where they are being held after being handed over to the Kenyan authorities by the Royal Navy. The eight pirates were arrested, and three others killed, by sailors of HMS Cumberland, as they attempted to hijack a cargo ship off the Horn of Africa. (AP)
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In this photo released by the United States Navy, the crew of the merchant vessel MV Faina stand on the deck of the ship, accompanied by Somali pirates, Oct. 19, 2008. (AP Photo/US Navy)
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The Liberian-flagged, Saudi-owned oil supertanker MV Sirius Star is seen at anchor on Nov. 19, 2008 off the coast of Somalia. The massive ship, its crew of 25 and its cargo of approximately $100 million worth of crude oil is under the control of Somali pirates. (U.S. Navy/William S. Stevens)
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This July 31, 2004 file photograph shows Indian naval ship INS Tabar, a stealth frigate being received by family members and children of Indian naval personnel as it arrives in Mumbai, India. (AP Photo/Rajesh Nirgude, File)
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Play CBS Video Video Pirate Hijacks On The Rise Pirates off the Somali coast continue to hijack ships and hold them for ransom. Mark Phillips reports. Also Current TV's Kaj Larsen, discusses his experience covering these elusive characters.
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Fast Facts Somalia Learn about the people, economy and history.
An anti-piracy watchdog group on Thursday welcomed an Indian warship's destruction of a suspected pirate vessel in waters off Somalia, where attacks have become increasingly violent and the hijackers increasingly bold.
In a rare victory in the sea war against the Somali pirates, the Indian navy's INS Tabar sank a suspected pirate "mother ship" in the Gulf of Aden and chased two attack boats on Tuesday.
Noel Choong, who heads the International Maritime Bureau's piracy reporting center in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, said he was heartened by the Tabar's success.
"It's about time that such a forceful action is taken. It's an action that everybody is waiting for," Choong told The Associated Press.
"If all warships do this, it will be a strong deterrent. But if it's just a rare case, then it won't work" to control the unprecedented level of piracy in the Gulf of Aden, he said.
The pirates have stunned the maritime community with their brazen attacks, highlighted by last week's hijacking of a Saudi-owned supertanker loaded with $100 million worth of crude oil.
A spokesman for Vela International Marine Ltd., the tanker's owner, said the company "took the decision to maintain no comment" on issues concerning the tanker, including the ransom demanded for release of the vessel and the 25-member crew.
Spokesman Mihir Sapru said he could neither "deny nor confirm" negotiations between the pirates and the oil tanker's owners are under way.
Kaj Larsen, a filmmaker who produced a documentary on pirates in southeast Asia, told CBS' The Early Show that hijacking a cargo ship is "extraordinarily easy."
Larsen said the only difference between the methods of pirates today compared with those of centuries past is the use of AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenades.
Piracy is a growth industry - Somalia's only one. In three years, the pirates have netted an estimated $30 million. For the hijackers, there are three sources of revenue from every ship seized; ransom for the crew, the cargo, and the ship itself which can be repainted, reflagged and resold.
CBS News correspondent Sheila MacVicar reports they've invested those profits and upgraded their gear. The marauders are now equipped with GPS, sophisticated communications equipment and rocket launchers. And now they're going after bigger prizes.
The Indian navy said the Tabar, operating off the coast of Oman, stopped the ship because it appeared similar to a pirate vessel mentioned in numerous piracy bulletins. It said the pirates fired at the Tabar after the officers asked it to stop to be searched.
Indian forces fired back, sparking fires and a series of onboard blasts - possibly caused by exploding ammunition - which destroyed the ship.
There were also reports Wednesday morning that a Greek bulk carrier had been seized in the Gulf of Aden, off Somalia's coast. CBS News could not immediately verify the reports.
If confirmed, the Greek vessel would be the ninth ship to be seized in the area in the past two weeks, according to maritime officials. Since the beginning of the year, there have been 39 confirmed hijackings in the Gulf of Aden out of 95 attacked.
Besides India, several other countries including the United States and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have warships patrolling the area. But attacks have continued unabated off Somalia, which is caught up in an Islamic insurgency and has had no functioning government since 1991.
It's about time that such a forceful action is taken. It's an action that everybody is waiting for.
Noel Choong, International Maritime BureauChoong and other officials say patrolling warships are hampered by a lack of a mandate to bring the hijackers to justice. Many European countries have restrictions on how far their ships can go in engaging the pirates, and many countries interpret international laws on piracy differently.
For example, NATO ships can intervene to prevent the seizure of ships if they are in the vicinity.
"But what they don't have the mandate to do is to board ships that have already been hijacked to free the crew," NATO spokesman James Appathurai told The Associated Press in Brussels.
Germany does not allow its warships to intercept hijacked vessels because their civilian crews of various nationalities could be at risk in the event of a fire-fight, Choong said.
On Wednesday, Russia's ambassador to NATO, Dmitry Rogozin, called on the international community to launch a joint amphibious operation against pirate strongholds in Somalia.
However, any such operation would likely require the approval of the U.N. Security Council, whose resolutions on anti-piracy operations are vague, Choong said.
Egypt hosted an emergency meeting Thursday of six Arab countries trying to forge a joint strategy against piracy in the Gulf of Aden which threatens a crucial international trade route through the Suez Canal in the Red Sea - Egypt's key source of revenue.
The countries in the meeting were those who with Egypt share the Red Sea - Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Jordan. A representative from Somalia's transitional government also attended the meeting behind closed doors in Cairo.
Egyptian diplomat Wafaa Bassem said ahead of the talks that the meeting would look into several options. They include setting up a piracy monitoring center, joint maneuvers by Arab navies, and a warning systems for ships navigating through the Red Sea.
And the African Union urged the United Nations on Thursday to quickly send peacekeepers to Somalia to combat the piracy problem.
Jean Ping, chairman of the African Union Commission, said the increasing piracy was "a clear indication of the further deterioration of the situation, with far-reaching consequences for (Somalia), the region and the larger international community."
Meanwhile, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband says his country won't pay a ransom for two Britons being held by pirates off the east African coast.
Miliband said Thursday that paying for the release of hostages risks encouraging more piracy.
He says a European force should deploy to the Gulf of Aden to support a NATO armada currently patrolling off the coast of Somalia. EU officials are expected to discuss plans to send ships from about 10 countries to root out pirates.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- All countries must respond to this growing problem it could affect everyone. Perhaps these are the kind of incidents that help bring the world together working in unity. Remember just because some ships are foreign doesn''t mean they are not bound for the U.S and it''s allies.
- Reply to this comment
- Let the whole world take care of itself.
Posted by deathofusa
Apparently, you aren''t aware that we are in a global economy and everything that happens around the world affects everyone else? Other than that; I would be more than happy to let you die in your own sewage. - Reply to this comment
- I don''t understand why the world has taken so long to respond to the piracy near Somalia. Too bad we can''t nuke the whole country.
- Reply to this comment
- Anyone know where I can pick up a heavily armed, seaworthy vessel, cheap?
Posted by VoidMaster
EBAY EBAY EBAY - Reply to this comment
- There seems to be so much indecision on how to deal with this. Today would be a good day to become a pirate.
Anyone know where I can pick up a heavily armed, seaworthy vessel, cheap? - Reply to this comment
- An anti-piracy watchdog group on Thursday welcomed an Indian warship''s destruction of a suspected pirate vessel in waters off Somalia,
Put INDIA Navy incharge, since we can do shiiii... - Reply to this comment
- The world could just start with wiping Somolia off the face of the map. The only way to correct that situation is to start from scratch. These pirates have to come home eventually and I would wipe out every port and every staging area. I would blockade the coast line and blow out the water any ship tracking to break through. I would use special forces to free every ship now held and kill every pirate/terrorist on board.
- Reply to this comment
- Americans. Unless one of our ships is being taken over by one of thess pirates, STAY OUT OF IT. We will end up having to do EVERYTHING and then we will get blamed when a "poor little Somali" gets killed. Let the whole world take care of itself.
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