NAIROBI: The seizing of the Aris 13 tanker and its Sri Lankan crew on Monday — the first successful attack by Somali pirates since 2012 — came as little surprise to John Steed of the Oceans Beyond Piracy campaign group.
International naval patrols and anti-piracy measures on commercial ships have practically eradicated Somali piracy since its peak in early 2011.
But the poverty and other factors motivating the pirates have not disappeared and some ships may be letting their guard drop.
“The question wasn’t really if an attack was going to happen, the question was when,” Steed, who heads the Horn of Africa section of the non-governmental organisation (NGO), told AFP.
Somali piracy not beaten?
Steed says the international community took significant steps to improve security, boosting naval forces in the area and requiring ships to take protection measures. These included reporting in and out of high risk areas, sailing at top speed as far away as possible from the coast and travelling with armed escorts.
“Hundreds of pirates were arrested, others gave up, and we hadn’t had an attack of a commercial ship for five years,” he said.
“But the one thing that’s not really been addressed is the real root cause of this, which is poverty and the lack of jobs on the ground. There’s also a drought, so there’s no food, no water.”
Illegal fishing in Somali waters, often by ships from Southeast Asia, feeds resentment among locals, who have seen outsiders looting their resources, Steed said.
“We’ve been warning that the pirates haven’t gone away, they’ve just been doing other things, they’re smuggling all sorts of goods, like weapons. And when the opportunity came to take a ship, they’ve taken it.”
More attacks?
“There is a potential for copycat attacks. If this one was to be successful, possibly with ransom money, other pirate groups might try the same thing,” Steed warned.
Shipping must get back to following proper security procedures, he said, and for a long-term solution the problems of Somali fishermen must be addressed.
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