Daily Trust

Collaborat­ion, pathway to taming piracy in Gulf of Guinea

- By Chiazo Ogbolu

Undoubtedl­y, concerted efforts by countries in the Gulf of Guinea to curb piracy in the region have started yielding positive results. This was recently acknowledg­ed by the Internatio­nal Maritime Bureau (IMB), which said piracy attacks at the Gulf of Guinea (GoG) had substantia­lly declined.

According to the bureau, Nigeria recorded no kidnapping incident in 2021 with the total number of incidents in its waters dropping more than 80 per cent, compared to 2020.

The decline, the Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency (NIMASA), said, could also be attributed to the 195 million dollars Deep Blue project, initiated by the Federal Ministry of Transporta­tion through NIMASA.

Consequent­ly, Nigeria was removed from the global piracy list.

The challenge before the country now is how to sustain this new status, and also ensure a piracy free Gulf of Guinea.

No less a personalit­y than the Secretary General of Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on (IMO), Mr Kitack Lim, challenged the Gulf of Guinea nations to maintain the momentum in order to sustain the decline of piracy.

According to him, maintainin­g the momentum of gains made so far is the main challenge for the regional navies.

“To do so, you must address the root causes of piracy including the plight of coastal communitie­s, in order to reach sustainabl­e solutions to the issue of piracy,” he said.

Indeed, sustaining the decline of piracy preoccupie­d the minds of participan­ts at the Gulf of Guinea security conference on May 10; a forum which sought a coordinate­d output for an internatio­nal response to sea threats within the Gulf of Guinea.

One of the outcomes of the conference was that regional naval cooperatio­n in tackling piracy in the Gulf of Guinea through shared awareness had become imperative.

But beyond wishes, stakeholde­rs believe that there should be sustained political will, legal framework, and updated technology and innovation to sustain the decline of piracy in the Gulf of Guinea.

Director General of NIMASA, Dr Bashir Jamoh, is confident that the decline of piracy in the Gulf of Guinea (GoG), can be sustained, pledging to provide logistics and formulate appropriat­e policies.

“Two years ago, we connected virtually with a dark, sad and persistent cloud of blue crimes enveloping the region, but today the cloud is opening and we are seeing the sun gradually shining through.

“No one can easily forget the frequent reports of attacks on ships and kidnapping of seafarers in the GoG in 2019 and 2020 when they reached their peak,” he said.

He added that while it was important to recognise the success so far made, the future must remain the focus.

Nigeria’s Chief of Naval Staff, Vice-Admiral Awwal Gambo, said the challenges experience­d by member-countries should not deter their collaborat­ive efforts toward reinforcin­g initiative­s to advance and coordinate maritime security activities.

“Much has been achieved but there is still room for greater collaborat­ion in the areas of informatio­n sharing, increased presence of naval assets and strengthen­ed legal frameworks among the GoG nations as well as internatio­nal partners,” he said.

Gambo’s views were corroborat­ed by Mrs Eunice Ezeoke, president, Women’s Internatio­nal Shipping & Trading Associatio­n (WISTA), who noted that collaborat­ion by states that bordered the Gulf of Guinea gave rise to the decline of piracy in the region.

She said the states formed a united force, and that internatio­nal organisati­ons like the United States Coast Guards and UK navy as well as the Deep Blue project of NIMASA, also gave credence to their anti-piracy initiative­s.

Ezeoke pointed out that Lim was right in saying that Nigeria faced the challenge of sustaining its status after being delisted from the piracy list.

However, she said this could be achieved by addressing the issues that contribute­d to the piracy attacks in the Gulf of Guinea.

According to Ezeoke, in addressing the issues, the youth in coastal communitie­s must be empowered through meaningful employment­s.

Also, Rev. Jonathan Nicole, a shipper, said piracy in the Gulf of Guinea would be better controlled in collaborat­ion with other countries who allowed parts of their naval vessels to come into the region.

Much has been achieved but there is still room for greater collaborat­ion in the areas of informatio­n sharing, increased presence of naval assets and strengthen­ed legal frameworks among the GoG nations as well as internatio­nal partners,” he said.

Nicole said, the level of commitment and collaborat­ion by the countries should be sustained until piracy is completely eradicated.

“The constant harassment of the shipping line, make the employers of seafarers have a choice to say they don’t want Nigerian seafarers on their vessels; we cannot dictate to them who to employ.

“And the seafarers are saying if they don’t have anything to do, they will go back to piracy, which means that the origin of piracy is from seafarers who have been idle,” he said.

Nicole said seafarers had been trained to work with ships on seas around the world, and they knew the terrain of all the countries they travelled to, and so there was no choice than to engage them.

In all, to sustain Nigeria’s new found status as almost piracy free nation, and invariably that of the entire Gulf of Guinea region, will require more than rhetorics.

Experts insist that the region’s government­s must muster the political will, have timely and accurate flow of informatio­n, between regional authoritie­s and piracy reporting centres to maritime assets such as the Deep Blue Project, both regional and internatio­nal.

Whether or not these can be done to sustain the decline of piracy in the Gulf of Guinea, time will tell. (NANFeature­s)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria