You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Africa Horn
Guards, razor wire help keep Somali pirates at bay - NATO
2012-04-03
The hijack success rate for Somali pirates has dropped sharply in recent months, a NATO official said on Monday, due in part to more merchant ships turning to armed security guards, razor wire and water pumps to protect themselves.
So a good point defense seems to work.
Improved international cooperation on combating piracy on land and at sea - covering an area four times the size of the Arabian peninsula - has been the cornerstone of efforts to tackle a problem costing the world economy up to $12 billion a year, a spokesman for NATO's counter-piracy force in the Indian Ocean said.

"Only six vessels have been pirated for ransom in the last eight months, compared to 36 in the preceding eight," Lieutenant Commander Mehmet Elyurek told reporters on board the TCG Giresun, the Turkish flagship of the force that operates off the Horn of Africa.

The rate of successful hijack attempts had "almost returned to pre-crisis (2007) levels."

John Steed, a former head of the United Nations counter-piracy unit, has said a major reason for the drop in the number of vessels hijacked is that the pirates got so rich last year.

But increased use of armed private security guards, and other defences like pirate-pummelling water pumps and razor wire are also helping reduce the number of successful attacks on merchant ships.

"Armed security guards on board the merchant vessels is very effective means of protecting them," Rear Admiral Sinan Azmi Tosun, the commander of the SNMG2 said. "We welcome all these protection measures."

Nine pirated merchant ships are still anchored off the Somali coast waiting for ransom payments from their owners, and an Iranian sugar ship hijacked last week near the Maldives is on its way to Somalia, he said.
It can't be intercepted before arrival because...
Pirates held 1,026 hostages last year but after some $146 million in ransom was paid to free 30 vessels, the number of hostages has fallen to 236, according to NATO figures.
Posted by:Besoeker

#11  Finally, the Somali's get the bullet-point we sent out.
Posted by: Charles   2012-04-03 21:01  

#10  Would have been easier to NOT PAY RANSOMS in the first place + shoot first. Sigh. It is almost easy to sympathize with the pirates, considering the incentives that have been offered in the past.
Posted by: Scooter McGruder   2012-04-03 20:01  

#9  Don't give them any ideas.
Posted by: gorb   2012-04-03 18:56  

#8  Piracy costs "costing the world economy up to $12 billion a year."

Better impose an individual mandate for piracy insurance...
Posted by: American Delight   2012-04-03 17:47  

#7  On a slightly more serious note, I get the concerns some had about arming merchant ships. There were issues about ports, arms training and handling, storage, licensing and so on. I get that it's a thorny problem, but it wasn't an insolvable problem.

Lo and behold when the insurers got tired of paying, and the owners got tired of paying, and the sailors got tired of sitting in stir in Puntland, the problem got solved.
Posted by: Steve White   2012-04-03 17:18  

#6  Seems like we won't need the Q ships after all.

Pity...
Posted by: Steve White   2012-04-03 17:17  

#5  Ironic, indeed. I don't know whether the fuss was over men with guns (oh noes!) or that the pirates (indigenous brown-skinned people engaging in their charming tribal customs) might get shot without due process.

Rather than iron-clad protection, security often means simply making it difficult enough that the baddies to go somewhere else for their boodle. Compared to the expense of losing and ransoming a ship and crew, men with guns sounds very cost effective.
Posted by: SteveS   2012-04-03 17:04  

#4  "Armed security guards on board the merchant vessels is very effective means of protecting them"

Ironic, considering the amount of hyperventilating when armed guards were first employed.
Posted by: Pappy   2012-04-03 16:14  

#3  Cauldrons of boiling oil would work well.
Posted by: gorb   2012-04-03 15:42  

#2  pirate-pummelling water pumps

Using a surplus WWII flame thrower would also be useful in demotivating the pirates.
Posted by: Chemist   2012-04-03 13:30  

#1  Offense would be better.
Posted by: Frank G   2012-04-03 09:36  

00:00