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Africa Horn
UN envoy proposes 'piracy courts'
2011-01-27
[Al Jazeera] The UN's special adviser of piracy has called for $25 million to be spent on setting up special courts for suspected pirates in Somalia's semi-autonomous enclaves of Puntland and Somaliland, as well as in Tanzania.

Jack Lang, a former French culture minister, on Tuesday recommended that the specialised courts be set up over the next eight months to begin to try some of the 90 per cent of suspected pirates who are released because nowhere can be found to try them.

The courts would operate under Somali laws.
Somalia has laws?
Somalia, which is in the midst of a conflict between a largely powerless government and gangs seeking its overthrow, lacks the legal infrastructure to try pirates.

Kenya and the Seychelles have prosecuted dozens of suspects handed over by foreign navies, who patrol of the Gulf of Aden in an attempt to protect some of the world's busiest shipping lanes. However,
The infamous However...
both have said they would have difficulties coping if all the seized pirates were sent to them.

Lang was briefing members of the UN Security Council on the increasing threat of piracy, which costs the global economy an estimated $7 billion to $12 billion a year.

"Pirates are becoming the masters of the Indian Ocean," he said. "The pirate economy ... is having a destabilising effect on Somalia and the entire region owing to rising prices, insecurity of energy supplies and loss of revenue."

About 30 ships, ranging from fishing boats to bulk carriers, are currently held by Somali pirates. Around 1,900 people have been taken hostage since the end of 2008.

Lang also recommended that two special prisons be built, one in Somaliland and one in Puntland, with capacity of 500 prisoners each, with a third to be built in Puntland soon afterward.

Any such project will have to be authorised by the Security Council, which took no immediate decision after listening to Lang's oral presentation.

Lang also proposed all countries should make piracy a criminal offense and impose universal jurisdiction for it, meaning they could prosecute pirates whatever their nationality and wherever the offense took place.
Posted by:Fred

#5  The courts would operate under Somali laws.

Why? Because Somalia happens to be the closest country in most cases? Because Somalians are the perps usually?

These are crimes in international waters.

As for the venue, I'd hold the court underwater.
Posted by: gorb   2011-01-27 23:44  

#4  Oh, ferchrissakes, just shoot the bastards.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2011-01-27 18:50  

#3  Is there a country in the world without a statute establishing piracy as a felony? It's sure as hell in common law, and I'm pretty sure it was in the Napoleonic code. The Commies generally cribbed the Napoleonic code for most matters, didn't they?

I don't know, I'm not a lawyer...
Posted by: Mitch H.   2011-01-27 14:52  

#2  We already have those courts. They're called "summary" and are to be followed by an appointment with something called a "yardarm".
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2011-01-27 12:21  

#1  See also RELATED > PEOPLES DAILY FORUM = SOMALI PIRACY EXPANDS AS [Regional = near-aboard]PIRATE PROSECUTION SOUGHT.

ARTIC = UN Special Advisor claims that, unless checked effectively, the SOMALI PIRATES may devol into becoming anti-Trade, Criminal = Pirate "MASTERS OF THE INDIAN OCEAN"???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2011-01-27 02:24  

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