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Noticias de interés
New strategies needed to eradicate piracy
Fecha de la noticias: 31/12/2020 • Publicada: 31/12/2020

A recent
report has refocused attention on the debilitating effects of piracy on
Nigeria’s coastal waters and the economy and the need for stronger official
response. In reaction to alarming data by the International Maritime Bureau
showing that the Gulf of Guinea accounts for over 90 per cent of global piracy
and sea-based kidnapping, the Chinese authorities, leading other foreign
nations, have suggested extra security protocols to protect their maritime
trade with Nigeria and other sub-regional partners. The Federal Government
needs to take extraordinary measures to secure its coastal waters through which
90 per cent of its international trade is conducted.
Preoccupied
with the unprecedented level of insecurity — terrorism, banditry, kidnapping
and armed robbery — across the country, the government appears to be paying
less than required attention to coastal piracy. It should pay attention.
Despite inefficiencies and poor infrastructure, the Nigerian Ports Authority
said the maritime sector had 10,000 direct new jobs in 2017. It is through the
coasts also that crude oil and gas that provide 90 per cent of export earnings
are evacuated and the gateway for most imported goods.
Piracy in
the Gulf of Guinea has spiked, keeping away cargoes and adding greatly to the
costs of trading with Nigeria. Insurers are said to charge thrice the going
rates on Gulf-bound cargoes. The gulf encompasses 13 countries in West and
Central Africa. Nigeria accounts for about 850 kilometres of its coastline, 12
nautical miles of territorial waters; it has 24 nautical miles of contiguous
zone, 200 miles of Exclusive Economic Zone and over 4,000 km of inland
waterways.
A report
by The PUNCH details how the oil and gas exports and other trade have come
under severe threat from local and international piracy and kidnapping gangs.
Oil production vessels, tankers, container ships and coastal barges have been
attacked and crews held hostage for ransom. Of the 132 piracy attacks globally
in the first nine months of 2020, most were in the Gulf of Guinea, as were 80
of the 85 seafarers kidnapped. The Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs
Agents estimates resulting losses at N1.9 trillion this year. The United
Nations said piracy in the gulf had become more violent and cost $2 billion in
annual losses. The International Maritime Bureau ranked Nigeria as the biggest
victim of piracy in 2018 with 21 attacks out of the 77 reported worldwide; 73
per cent of kidnappings and 92 per cent of the hostages held occurred in the
Gulf of Guinea. There were just three off Somalia, once the global hub of
piracy. Identified hotspots include Apapa, Bayelsa, Brass, Bonny Island and
Port Harcourt.
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Ominously, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime said piracy has moved
inland as local criminals attack barges on the creeks to steal crude in
coordination with gangs operating at sea. Passengers and their goods too are
coming under attack on inland waterways. Robbers and kidnappers attack ships
and boats while in the ports, said Reuters, with increased brigandage in the
Niger Delta region.
The
economy is haemorrhaging and the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari
(retd.), needs to give piracy as much attention as the criminality in the
hinterland. The Economist brands our coasts as the “’centre-point’ of
contemporary sea piracy,” with Nigeria hosting the largest share of piratical
operations. Shipping, said the Maritime Industry Foundation, “is the lifeblood
of the global economy,” carrying 90 per cent of world trade and generating over
$500 billion in freight rates. In Nigeria, it generates about $6 billion
annually, said the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, employs
100,000 persons directly and supports two million indirect jobs.
Safeguarding
the waterways therefore needs fresh thinking and strategies. The task forces,
naval operations and controversial security contracts have achieved limited
success. In June 2019, Buhari assented to the Suppression of Piracy and Other
Maritime Offences Act in furtherance of the Yaound? Code of Conduct, a pact
signed in 2013 by 25 West and Central African countries to address piracy,
armed robbery against ships and illegal shipping. This should be vigorously
enforced. The Nigerian Navy needs to be well-funded, manned and equipped with
coastal vessels and smaller, manoeuvrable patrol boats that can operate in the
labyrinthine creeks and inlets. The Navy, Police and the Nigerian Security and
Civil Defence Corps should have highly trained special operations personnel.
Increasingly, countries battling piracy, drug smuggling, human trafficking and
arms smuggling rely on intelligence, affordable interdiction technology tools
such as aerial and underwater drones, listening devices and one-man and two-person
mini vessels to smash criminal gangs and networks. Groundwork should commence
for a coastguard force to police the coastal and inland waters and free the
Navy for its primary military duty of territorial defence and power projection.
NIMASA should step up its plans to acquire additional surveillance airplanes
helicopters and boats. As the UNODC says, piracy is simply illegal big business
and should therefore be defeated by securing the land, tracking financial flows
and stamping out corruption. At their height, Somali pirates were collectively
making $30 million a year, it said.
A Cardiff
University research identified corruption, weak law enforcement and poverty as
aiding piracy in Nigeria and hindering efforts to stamp it out. The Navy,
Customs and the NPA allegedly collude with pirates. A report said that “the
dysfunctional oil industry and violent politics of the Niger Delta” also fuel
piracy. Tackling it therefore requires stepping up the anti-corruption war,
rigorous law enforcement, cleaning up state agencies, reforming the oil
industry and securing a buy-in by the coastal communities in law enforcement.
Unless locals take the lead, the federal security personnel will continue to
record limited success. As the Chinese have indicated, the country needs to
cobble together an international coalition similar to the one that stamped out
piracy on the Somali coast. UNCTAD projects global maritime trade to plunge by
4.1 per cent this year but expects it rise by 4.8 per cent in 2021; Nigeria
should quickly curtail piracy to benefit from that recovery curve.
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