Cape Times

Anti-piracy chief ‘sacked for blowing whistle on illegal fishing’

-

THE head of anti-piracy operations in the semi-autonomous Puntland region of Somalia said he had been fired for speaking out about illegal fishing, which he claims could trigger a new outbreak of piracy in the Indian Ocean.

Pirates hijacked an oil tanker off Somalia last week, the first such attack in the region since 2012 after shipping firms hired private security and internatio­nal warships started patrolling nearby waters.

Abdirizak Mohamed Dirir, the director of anti-piracy operations in Puntland, said the province’s president had sacked him after he told journalist­s that permits had been handed to illegal fishing vessels.

“The problem with Puntland is that if you talk about illegal fishing, you are seen as a criminal,” Dirir said. “But I will not stop talking about illegal fishing because if this is not stopped, piracy will restart again.”

In last week’s hijacking, unlike previous attacks, the ship was freed swiftly and with no ransom paid after the Puntland Maritime Police Force intervened.

Puntland officials blamed local anger over illegal fishing by foreign vessels for the attack. They warned that more hijackings might happen unless the problem was tackled.

President Abdiweli Mohamed Ali fired Dirir in a decree dated Sunday, saying he had taken into account the “need for a change and redoubling efforts to fight Puntland’s piracy”.

Dirir said the president had “violated the constituti­on” as consultati­ons were not made with other officials.

Somali officials say the decline in piracy in recent years has emboldened foreign-flagged illegal fishing vessels to plunder Somalia’s fish stocks closer to shore, bringing them within reach of pirate gangs.

The last outbreak of Somali piracy cost the world’s shipping industry billions of rand as pirates paralysed shipping lanes, kidnapped hundreds of seafarers and seized vessels more than 1 000 miles from Somalia’s coastline. – Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa