Africa Features

Killing of Somali pirate unlikely to cut attacks (News Feature)

By Michael Logan Mar 25, 2010, 13:48 GMT

Nairobi - The killing of a pirate during a shoot-out with private security guards on board a cargo ship this week is unlikely to deter armed gangs operating in Somalia's coastal waters, an analyst said Thursday.

The killing, the first of its kind, took place on Tuesday when a whaler and two skiffs operated by pirates attacked the Panama-flagged cargo ship MV Almezaan.

'It's unlikely that a single incident of a pirate being shot is going to alter their calculations,' Roger Middleton, a piracy expert with the London-based think tank Chatham House, told the German Press Agency dpa. 'It is inherently dangerous going out to sea in a smaller boat and trying to get on a bigger one.'

According to the European Union's anti-piracy force EU NAVFOR Somalia, two separate attacks on the MV Almezaan were repelled by the armed guards.

When the Spanish frigate ESPS Navarra responded to a distress call and intercepted the boats believed to have carried out the attack, they found six suspected pirates and the bullet-riddled body of a seventh.

Such incidents are expected to become more common as some shipping companies turn to private security teams to protect their ships. Prior to the deadly incident, there had already been several incidents of gun battles between pirates and security detachments on private vessels.

The shipping industry is split over how to deal with the pirate menace, which has exploded over the last few years.

The International Maritime Bureau and the US Navy has long advised shipping firms to employ non-lethal defensive measures, such as travelling in convoys, putting up barbed wire around the ship and creating safe rooms for the crew.

Shipping experts also worry that pirates will be driven to more violent tactics, such as firing rocket-propelled grenades at vessels, by private security. There has already been some anecdotal evidence of this.

There is little evidence to show that an increased threat of death will stop young Somalis taking to the seas in search of multimillion-dollar ransoms.

The pirates were not put off by the arrival of dozens of international warships, simply moving further out into the Indian Ocean to avoid patrols. Nor did the killing of three young Somalis by the US Navy during a hostage drama last year prompt a fall in attacks.

Too much money is at stake and the alternative is a life of poverty in Somalia, a nation which has had no effective central government for 19 years and is viewed as one of the most dangerous countries in the world.

'The basic calculation is that they stay at home and make a few hundred dollars per year or become a pirate and make 10,000 in a few months,' Middleton said.

There is also uncertainty over legal liability in cases where somebody is killed by private security.

While the Spanish navy arrested the suspected pirates and will likely hand them over to Kenya or the Seychelles for prosecution, the security detachment was left untouched.

Nobody is sure who is responsible for investigating the killing: Panama, the United Arab Emirates - where the ship's owners are based - or the unknown country from which the security company was employed.

There is also concern over the lack of regulation in the private security industry.

'One things with private security companies is that they are not regulated; there isn't even an industry body which ensure standards,' Middleton said. 'They operate in a grey area of law.'



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