Arab Times

Somali president offers amnesty to pirates

Bid to end attacks, seeks to rebuild country

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MOGADISHU, Feb 28, (AFP): Somalia’s president has offered an amnesty to young pirates in a bid to end attacks off the Horn of Africa nation’s coast as he seeks to rebuild the war-torn country, he told AFP.

“We have been negotiatin­g with the pirates indirectly through the elders,” said President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud. “Piracy has to end.”

Mohamud, elected by lawmakers six months ago, said that he wanted to offer an “alternativ­e means of earning a living” to young Somalis who have taken up the gun to join pirate gangs.

However, Mohamud said that the amnesty was not open to pirate kingpins — those who take the vast majority of the profits from the attacks — some of whom are wanted by Interpol.

“We are not giving them amnesty, the amnesty is for the boys,” he said, speaking on Wednesday in an interview at Villa Somalia, the Italian colonial art-deco palace in war-ravaged capital Mogadishu.

Somalia has been battered by conflict since 1991 but a new UN-backed government took power in September, ending eight years of transition­al rule by a corruption-riddled administra­tion.

Large parts of the country have been carved up by rival militias who have developed autonomous regions that pay little, if any, heed to the weak central government.

Many of the most notorious pirates, who launched attacks far across the Indian Ocean earning millions of dollars in internatio­nal ransoms, are based along the northern coastline of the semi-autonomous Puntland region.

The amnesty comes amid a sharp drop in the number of pirate attacks in Somalia, which are at a three-year low, thanks to beefed up naval patrols and teams of armed security guards aboard ships in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean.

However, while the pirates have lost ground, the Internatio­nal Maritime Bureau (IMB) still warns that Somalia’s waters remain extremely high-risk.

Seven boats and 113 hostages are still held by Somali pirates, according to the IMB, while some pirates have turned to land-based kidnapping and banditry instead.

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