Maybe it's not too late to be a pirate

In this forum you can discuss anything from sports, news, or what ever is on your mind.

Moderator: SMLCHNG

Post Reply
APLATillman
If we weren't all crazy ...
Posts: 537
Joined: August 10, 2006 12:11 am
Number of Concerts: 19
Favorite Boat Drink: free
Location: jersey shore

Maybe it's not too late to be a pirate

Post by APLATillman »

Piracy Flourishes Along Crucial Shipping Lane
by Corey Flintoff


NPR.org, August 25, 2008 · In an age when piracy has come to mean copying someone else's intellectual property, the sea-faring variety hasn't gotten much attention. But it's making a comeback along the 1,800-mile coastline of Somalia, a failed state where the law has little control.

Just last week, pirates attacked four ships off the coast, hijacking the vessels and kidnapping their crews.

The International Maritime Bureau, which keeps track of pirate attacks around the globe, says there have been seven ships hijacked in the past month in the Gulf of Aden, the body of water between Somalia and Yemen. Although they lack the flamboyance of Capt. Jack Sparrow, the pirates of the Somali coast are ruthlessly efficient. In each case, the marauders chased the vessel down with small, fast boats, firing automatic rifles. When the merchant ships stopped, the attackers scrambled aboard and took the crews hostage.

The latest ships to be captured — all on Aug. 21 — include an Iranian bulk carrier, a Japanese-operated chemical tanker with 19 crew members, and a German freighter with nine people aboard. Just the day before, pirates seized a Malaysian tanker with a crew of 39 in the same area. The tanker was bound for Rotterdam with a load of palm-oil said to be worth about $2.5 million.

The pirates typically hold crew members for ransom. That's what they did with the 30-member crew of a French cruise ship that was seized in the Gulf of Aden in April. The luxury sailing vessel "Ponant" can carry more than 60 passengers, but none were aboard when the yacht was captured on its way back to the Mediterranean.

The International Maritime Bureau, a Malaysia-based agency that tracks piracy worldwide, says some pirates appear to be using "mother ships" to bring their speed-boat crews out into the sea lanes, where they can attack.

The United Nations passed a resolution in June authorizing "all necessary means" to repress piracy in the region, allowing foreign warships to enter Somalia's territorial waters in pursuit of pirates. The resolution acknowledged that Somalia has no power to interdict pirates or patrol its own coast. In fact, the country has not had a central government with any significant power since warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

But shipping companies and piracy experts say that, so far, the nations that have the military power to take action under the U.N. mandate haven't done so.

"The U.N. resolution has done nothing to prevent these attacks," says Pottengal Mukundan, the director of Commercial Crime Services for the International Chamber of Commerce.

There is a coalition naval force in the region, composed of ships from the U.S., Canada, Britain, France, Germany and Pakistan, which reportedly is tracking the hijacked vessels. But Mukundan says that once a vessel has been taken, it's too late for military action, which would further endanger the crew.

Mukundan says the coalition fleet doesn't have the resources to do what's really needed, "to disrupt this activity before the vessels are hijacked. They need to board and question suspicious ships when they spot them." Mukundan says piracy is still a relatively low priority for the navies involved, "but it should be higher. This is the major seaway for all vessels coming from Europe through the Suez Canal."

Mukundan says the ransoms paid for ships and crews taken by the pirates are driving up insurance rates for all the vessels that pass through the Gulf of Aden, and adding to the cost of most of the goods that pass between Europe and Asia. The money also is going to one of the poorest regions on earth, he says, where crime lords use it to consolidate their control and keep the region unstable.

Much of the piracy is believed to be centered in the northern Somali region of Puntland, right at the tip of the Horn of Africa. According to the Reuters news agency, pirates are using their stolen wealth to buy expensive cars, build lavish houses and marry additional wives.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stor ... d=93893918
flipflopgirl
Last Man Standing
Posts: 63423
Joined: April 13, 2006 2:32 am
Number of Concerts: 53
Favorite Boat Drink: Z-Man's MANGO THINGIES!!!!!
Location: I have been promoted from John Frinzi's stalker to ROADIE!!!! :)
Contact:

Post by flipflopgirl »

:o :o :o :wench: :wench: :wench:
Image "While the rest of the species is descended from apes, redheads are descended from cats." Mark Twain
bravedave
At the Bama Breeze
Posts: 4285
Joined: January 16, 2002 7:00 pm

Post by bravedave »

According to the Reuters news agency, pirates are using their stolen wealth to buy expensive cars, build lavish houses and marry additional wives.


Idiots...

They deserve to be hung from the yardarm.


Bigamy is having one wife too many. So is monogamy.
“Give me a woman who loves beer and I will conquer the world.”
- Kaiser Welhelm

"The call is a loud wulli-wulli, and there is much twittering at the drinking holes."
Tropic_Al
Under My Lone Palm
Posts: 5085
Joined: July 10, 2006 4:52 pm
Number of Concerts: 29
Favorite Boat Drink: Just about anything, as long it's in a blue cup.
Location: Hangin' out on the Jersey Shore

Post by Tropic_Al »

"But I don't want to be a pirate" :pirate:

Image
Image
Michael "Tank" Listowski 05.14.54-09.24.08 RIP
GumboPirate
License to Chill
Posts: 1129
Joined: March 24, 2007 12:36 pm
Number of Concerts: 0
Location: A Mile High in Youngstown

Post by GumboPirate »

Tropic_Al wrote:"But I don't want to be a pirate" :pirate:

Image

:lol: :lol: :lol:
ImageImage
OceanCityGirl
At the Bama Breeze
Posts: 4847
Joined: March 15, 2002 7:00 pm
Favorite Buffett Song: Havana Daydreaming - today
Number of Concerts: 2
Favorite Boat Drink: Mojito
Location: Ocean City NJ

Post by OceanCityGirl »

Piracy is a result of extreme poverty. One of the reasons for the modern surge in piracy is the downsizing of the US military. Most piracy attacks are in areas previously heavily patrolled by Naval and Coast Guard Vessels. They did not have to do anything to prevent piracy. Their presence or the threat of their presence some time soon was enough. Check out some of the numbers. There has been a great rise in attacks which coincide with decreased patrols. The attacks are often violent and fatal. American cruisers who display wealth are vulnerable.
Image
Navy Seals are Cooler then Pirates
Image
You Can Dream Anyway, There's always next year!!!
Post Reply