
May-06-08
"France and Somalia do not have an extradition treaty and French laws are not applicable to crimes committed outside France," said Hussein Mohamed Aidid, chairman of the Eritrea-based Alliance for the Reliberation of Somalia (ARS).
"If the pirates were extradited illegally, like it happened in this case, then they were kidnapped by the French special forces. If the pirates acted against the law, the French should not have done the same.
"The pirates are criminals, but they should be punished by courts with the legal mandate to do so," Aidid, Somalia's former deputy prime minister, told AFP.
French special forces last month arrested the pirates for kidnapping the French luxury yacht Le Ponant, freeing the boat and its 30-member crew on April 11.
Despite the lack of any formal extradition accord, French prosecutors charged them in Paris with "abduction and detention of hostages with a view to obtaining a ransom," as well as "theft" and "receiving stolen goods."
The pirates are still in French detention.
Last week, France and the United States presented a text before the UN Security Council seeking to authorise states to send warships into Somalia's territorial waters to combat piracy.
The coastal waters off Somalia -- which has not had an effective central government for more than 17 years and is plagued by insecurity -- are considered among the most dangerous in the world.
More than 25 ships were seized in Somali coastal waters last year despite US navy patrols, according to the International Maritime Bureau.
Source: AFP, May 06, 2008