Muscat Daily

Pirate attacks surge in 2020: Watchdog

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Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia - Pirate attacks on ships worldwide jumped 20 per cent last year driven by a record spate of kidnapping­s off West Africa, a maritime watchdog said on Wednesday.

A total of 195 incidents of piracy and armed robbery were reported, up from 162 in 2019, the Internatio­nal Maritime Bureau (IMB) said in its report.

Out of 135 sailors abducted globally last year, 130 of them were recorded in the Gulf of Guinea off West Africa - the highest ever number of crew members taken hostage in the region.

The gulf stretches thousands of kilometres from Angola in the south to Senegal in the north, and its waters are considered among the world’s most dangerous for piracy.

IMB director Michael Howlett said the surge in abductions showed ‘the increased capabiliti­es of pirates in the Gulf of Guinea with more and more attacks taking place further from the coast’.

Pirates have shifted from hijacking tankers for oil to the more lucrative abductions of sailors for ransom in recent years, added Noel Choong, head of the Kuala Lumpur-based IMB piracy reporting centre.

Choong said the abductions were increasing at an ‘alarming rate’ and appealed to West African countries to step up patrols.

The Gulf of Guinea has now eclipsed the Gulf of Aden, off Somalia, as Africa’s piracy hotspot.

The countries in the region - with the help of the US and France - have been trying for several years to increase collaborat­ion and bolster their means of interventi­on. Home to Sub-Saharan Africa’s two main oil producers Nigeria and Angola, piracy there has seriously disrupted internatio­nal shipping routes.

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