Thursday, October 24, 2013
Pirate attacks off the
coast of Somalia are at the lowest level since 2006 because of
tougher ship security and more Western naval patrols, while
onshore al Shabaab militants have shifted tactics to guerrilla
warfare, the United Nations said on Wednesday.Somalia is struggling to rebuild after two decades of civil
war and lawlessness sparked by the overthrow of President Siad
Barre in 1991.
In a report to the U.N. Security Council, Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon said there were 17 attacks in the first nine months
of 2013, compared to 99 attacks in the same period last year.
"As of 17 October, 2013, two small vessels and 60 seafarers
are still held by Somali pirates, most of them ashore, and some
of which the whereabouts are unknown," he said, adding that in
2012 pirates collected up to $40 million in ransom payments.
"The hostages held by Somali pirates endure dire conditions
in captivity and are sometimes tortured and threatened by
pirates in an effort to extract the maximum ransom," Ban said.
According to estimates by the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime
and the World Bank, pirates received up to $413 million in
ransoms between April 2005 and December 2012.
A Somali pirate attack that was ended by U.S. Navy special
forces and not a ransom payment has been turned into a Hollywood
film starring actor Tom Hanks. "Captain Phillips" is based the
seizure of a cargo ship by Somali pirates in 2009.
While the surviving pirate from that attack is serving a
prison sentence in the United States, Ban noted that in general
neither the Somali government nor any local authorities had
seriously investigated or prosecuted pirate leaders, financiers,
negotiators or facilitators.
AL SHABAAB FIGHT
In a separate letter to the Security Council, released on
Wednesday, Ban said he was extremely concerned about Somalia's
security situation and appealed for more international support
to avoid gains being derailed by al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab.
A joint U.N. and African Union review of the U.N.-backed
African peacekeeping mission in Somalia - known as AMISOM -
found that al Shabaab had deliberately shifted tactics since May
from conventional to guerrilla warfare, with targets including
the government, state bodies and the United Nations.
A suicide bomber killed at least 16 people on Saturday in an
attack on a cafe in a Somali town close to the Ethiopian border
frequented by local and foreign soldiers fighting the al
Qaeda-linked al Shabaab militants.
"In the face of these threats, and in the absence of
enablers and force multipliers that would have permitted a
sustained offensive against Al-Shabaab, the Somali National Army
and AMISOM have now assumed a largely defensive, static
posture," Ban said in the letter to the Security Council.
Ban warned that an al Shabaab attack on Nairobi's Westgate
shopping center last month in neighboring Kenya, which killed at
least 67 people, was "worrisome evidence that al Shabaab is able
to plan, rehearse and implement complex attacks threatening
peace and stability in Somalia and beyond."
He said there was an urgent need to resume and strengthen
the military campaign against al Shabaab and backed the joint
review's recommendation that the African force be increased by
2,550 troops to more than 20,000 for up to two years.
"I agree with the findings of the joint mission that it is
not realistic for AMISOM to achieve the desired effect of
resuming the military campaign without air assets," Ban said,
urging all 193 U.N. member states to consider urgently providing
helicopters and other assets that had already been approved by
the U.N. Security Council, but not provided by anyone.
(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Vicki Allen)