UPDATED ON:
Thursday, November 20, 2008
23:30 Mecca time, 20:30 GMT
 
News Middle East
Egypt hosts Arab piracy meeting
An Indian frigate, attacked and destroyed a Somali pirate ship after coming under fire [AFP] 

Egypt has held a meeting of six Arab countries in an attempt to forge a joint strategy against piracy in the Gulf of Aden, which threatens the international trade route through Egypt's Suez Canal.

The countries represented in the meeting on Thursday were those who share the Red Sea with Egypt - Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Jordan.

A representative from Somalia's transitional government also attended the meeting, held behind closed doors in Cairo.

Wafaa Bassem, an Egyptian diplomat, said ahead of the talks that the meeting would examine several options to tackle piracy, which threatens the Suez Canal trade and as such Egypt's key source of revenue.

Egypt is concerned that the recent surge in piracy, highlighted by the hijacking of the Saudi supertanker Sirius Star loaded with $100m worth of crude oil last week, will prompt shipping companies to opt for safer routes that avoid the Canal.

That would mean longer, costlier trips around the southern tip of Africa but Odfjell SE, a big Norwegian shipping group, took that step on Tuesday, ordering its more than 90 tankers to take the longer route.

Danish shipper AP Moller-Maersk is also routing some of its 50 oil tankers around the Cape of Good Hope, while Norway's Frontline, which ferries much of the Middle East's oil to world markets, said it was considering a similar step.

Ransom demands

Earlier a spokesman for the pirates said they were demanding $25m for the return of the Sirius Star.

In depth

'Toxic waste' behind Somali piracy

Escaping Somalia's pirates

"We are demanding $25m from the Saudi owners of the tanker. We do not want long-term discussions to resolve the matter," Mohamed Said said.

"The Saudis have 10 days to comply, otherwise we will take action that could be disastrous."

The tanker was seized in the Indian Ocean some 800km off the coast of Kenya, and is now anchored off the Somali coast at Haradheere, roughly in the centre of the country's coastline.  It is the biggest vessel ever hijacked.

Somali pirates have now seized three ships off the coast of the Horn of Africa in the past three days.

A Greek tanker, a Thai fishing boat and a Hong Kong-registered vessel have also been captured despite a large international naval presence in the waters off Somalia.

According to the International Maritime Bureau the Thai fishing boat had 16 crew members on board.

Policing piracy

A coalition of warships from eight nations, as well as from Nato and the US Navy's 5th Fleet, is patrolling a critical zone in the Gulf of Aden where most of the hijackings have occurred.

Saudi Arabia and Egypt both have significant naval forces of about 18,000-20,000 personnel each, though it was unclear, even after Thursday's meeting in Egypt, whether the countries would deploy ships.

Other Arab countries in the region have smaller and less experienced navies.

 Pirates have anchored the Sirius Star off the coast of Somalia [AFP]
The INS Tabar, an Indian frigate, attacked a Somali pirate ship on Tuesday after coming under fire.

In Somalia, an impoverished country where public institutions have crumbled, many see piracy as the only profitable business.

The pirates are said to have built luxurious homes and propped up the economy in the semi-autonomous region of Puntland, where many of them are based.

Amid the anarchy and lawlessness in most parts of Somalia, northern coastal towns like Haradhere, Eyl and Bossaso, the so-called pirate economy is thriving, due to the money pouring in from pirate ransoms that have reached $30 million this year alone.

The seizure of the Sirius Star, prompted South Korea to look at sending military vessels to join US, French and Russian warships already operating in the area.

Jean Ping, The African Union's top diplomat, said on Thursday that the UN should send peacekeepers to Somalia to stop the fighting that is contributing to the growth of piracy.

But diplomats in the region say there is little hope of any speedy UN intervention in Somalia and Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, Nato's secretary-general, has said that the alliance would continue to patrol the seas but not get involved on land.

"Piracy is a very serious challenge and we have to fight it, but I think if you come to the part of these operations, for instance on land, then it is first and foremost up to the United Nations and not organisations like Nato to get deeply involved," he said during a visit to Ghana.

At least 13 vessels with more than 270 crew members are already being held by various pirate gangs. A Ukrainian-registered cargo ship carrying tanks and heavy weaponry remains anchored off the Somali coast.

 Source: Agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 10
 
tjm308
Afghanistan
20/11/2008
Maybe ...
the WORLD – not the US, not NATO – the WORLD – should try turning the tables. Find and destroy their fine houses, SUVs, their mother ships and speed boats tied up in docks. Second part of the fix – restore and protect the fishing rights of the local fishermen, give them nice boats and provide markets. Will be cheaper than fighting pirates.

ahmed
Kenya
20/11/2008
the u.s involvment in the piracy
the fact of the matter is that the u.s navy is backing the somalis to pirate(secretly) and are doing this so as to send a message to the world that there is insecurity in the place so that he is given that responsibility to secure and in return do what they are know to do always

richard
Canada
20/11/2008
piracy on the high seas
Piracy on the seas is a hanging offence is it not? When captured they should immidiately be hung from the nearest yardarm end of story.

Aracanga
Brazil
20/11/2008
Egypt hosts Arab piracy meeting
It is a shame for Saudi Arabia that its huge tanker has a Liberian registration. The use of flags of convenience is time to have an end.

Nancy
Canada
20/11/2008
Mexican Stalemate
(1) The pirates' 10-dat ultimatum was a bad strategy for them. Ultimatums are the worst attempt at any negotiation, big or small. (2) If the pirates actually kill someone, they will lose their trump card holding human lives at stake. If lives are lost, the pirates will likely be bombed. Similarly, if the pirates create massive ecological damage by sinking ships carrying oil, I doubt the pirates will live much longer after that.

Krapotkin
United States
20/11/2008
Piracy in the Red Sea
I opine, that the only way this Piracy Cancer will be stopped, is by dusting-off the old Anti Piracy Maritime Laws, used in the 16/17/18 centuries to wipe it off the Seas! The Royal Navy and other Navies, were hanging the pirates on the spot, on the highest mast. No trials, no Juries, just fair Justice! Houston,Texas

Duncan
Afghanistan
21/11/2008
Piracy, A Real Threat or the United States attempt to find a Casus Belli
I heard that the United States Navy ordered it sailors not to prevent the recent pirate attacks off the horn of Africa despite their foreknowledge of such.

Armoredfish
India
21/11/2008
Now The Fun Has Begun! - The Great Game
It is good for the world that no ships ply has it is energy intensive to have countries use up each other's resources and food and using transport energy to end them over thousands of miles. The British must eat butter scones without the tea of India and USA must use horses which are aplenty rather than the oil of other nations. Somalian conditions is the creations of the Great game - the Horn of Africa has to have an impact. Look at the way it juts out so imposingly into the Gulf of Aden.

Change Must Start With You!
United Arab Emirates
27/11/2008
To you a pirate, but for him its a source of income. To me, a terrorist but to you he may be a freedom fighter. The world today is at a stalemate. There isnt a nation or an individual who is neither smarter or stronger. Its just that some have little more then others and those who have little to none, make decision that often involved an orthodox means. The important thing to understand is that no one is right and everyone is often the usual suspect/perpetrator. My advice, do a lot of research.

Jared
United States
01/12/2008
Symptom not the cause
Piracy and violent crime is just a symptom of poor education, socio-economic inequalities, and unstable support from governments. Hanging pirates and destroying their homes won't change the social and economic issues that created the opportunity and desire for pirates. I agree that we need more than just NATO and the US involved - we need more African nations to take a stand against injustice. We need fair elections and strong governments that aren't interested in corruption.

 
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