Shipping suffers increased piracy
PIRATE attacks around the world hit their highest level last year since 2003, with Somali gangs accounting for more than half the incidents and a growing worry, a maritime watchdog said yesterday.
Somali pirates have stepped up attacks in recent months and ventured further out to sea, making millions of dollars in ransom by hijacking ships in the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden, which links Europe to Asia.
The London-based International Maritime Bureau (IMB) said its piracy reporting center in Kuala Lumpur logged a total of 406 incidents last year, with 217 of those attributed to Somali pirates. There were 293 incidents in 2008.
More desperate
"Pirates are now more desperate to hijack ships. Recent attacks, at distances of over 1,000 nautical miles from Mogadishu, indicate the increased capability of the Somali pirates," the bureau's annual report said.
Foreign navies have been deployed off the Gulf of Aden since the start of 2009 and have operated convoys, as well as setting up and monitoring a transit corridor for ships to pass through vulnerable points.
But their forces have been stretched over the vast expanses of water including the Indian Ocean, leaving vessels vulnerable.
"The international navies play a critical role in the prevention of piracy off Somalia and it is vital that they remain in the region," IMB director Pottengal Mukundan said.
Britain's Royal Navy chief Admiral Mark Stanhope told Reuters last week that efforts by foreign navies to combat Somali piracy have made a difference but would not be able to eradicate attacks.
Somali pirates have stepped up attacks in recent months and ventured further out to sea, making millions of dollars in ransom by hijacking ships in the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden, which links Europe to Asia.
The London-based International Maritime Bureau (IMB) said its piracy reporting center in Kuala Lumpur logged a total of 406 incidents last year, with 217 of those attributed to Somali pirates. There were 293 incidents in 2008.
More desperate
"Pirates are now more desperate to hijack ships. Recent attacks, at distances of over 1,000 nautical miles from Mogadishu, indicate the increased capability of the Somali pirates," the bureau's annual report said.
Foreign navies have been deployed off the Gulf of Aden since the start of 2009 and have operated convoys, as well as setting up and monitoring a transit corridor for ships to pass through vulnerable points.
But their forces have been stretched over the vast expanses of water including the Indian Ocean, leaving vessels vulnerable.
"The international navies play a critical role in the prevention of piracy off Somalia and it is vital that they remain in the region," IMB director Pottengal Mukundan said.
Britain's Royal Navy chief Admiral Mark Stanhope told Reuters last week that efforts by foreign navies to combat Somali piracy have made a difference but would not be able to eradicate attacks.
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