The Daily Telegraph

Warning for yacht owners after surge of piracy in the Caribbean

- By Colin Freeman

LUXURY yacht owners have been warned of a surge in piracy in the southern Caribbean, as Venezuela’s economic collapse spurs its penniless fishermen into banditry.

According to a new survey of global maritime security, 71 piracy incidents took place in the region last year, compared with just 21 the year before.

Researcher­s for the charity Oceans Beyond Piracy, which compiled the survey, said that a majority of the attacks had been off the coast of Venezuela, which is currently engulfed by political turmoil and hyperinfla­tion.

The local fishing industry, which used to operate in the Caribbean waters off Venezuela’s northern coast, has been in difficulty in recent years, causing many to turn to drug traffickin­g and – increasing­ly – sea robbery.

The trend has direct echoes of the Somali piracy crisis, where impoverish­ed fishermen likewise turned to hijacking vessels after the country’s collapse into lawlessnes­s in the Nineties.

“The incidents we’ve logged have been concentrat­ed mainly in Venezuelan waters,” Maisie Pigeon, the report’s lead author, told the The Daily Telegraph. “As in Somalia, insecure areas on land can breed wider insecurity at sea.”

The warning comes as Venezuela continues to lurch towards all-out collapse, following new internatio­nal sanctions imposed on Caracas after Sunday’s disputed election, which returned Nicolas Maduro, the socialist president, to power.

Mr Maduro, who denies claims that the election was rigged, responded to the sanctions by expelling two US diplomats on Tuesday.

Hyperinfla­tion caused by Mr Maduro’s continuati­on of his predecesso­r Hugo Chavez’s command-economy nationalis­ation policies has hit particular­ly

‘The incidents have been in Venezuelan waters. But as in Somalia, insecurity on land can breed insecurity at sea’

hard in poor Venezuelan coastal states such as Sucre, where fishing was once the sole livelihood.

Such is the shortage of goods on the shelves that some of Sucre’s pirates now make a living smuggling nappies and other basic goods from Trinidad.

In late April, a pirate attack off the coast of Suriname, east along the coast from Venezuela, left at least a dozen fishermen feared dead. In a separate incident in May, a fishing boat captain was shot dead after his vessel was attacked off Suriname.

While most of the piracy victims are fellow fishermen or commercial vessels passing close to shore, yachters sailing to nearby Caribbean islands could become increasing­ly at risk.

In March 2016, a German sailor was murdered and the yacht’s captain seriously injured when masked pirates boarded their vessel anchored in St Vincent’s Wallilabou Bay, where Pirates of the Caribbean was filmed.

There are fears that if the Venezuelan crisis gets worse, the pirates may be tempted to range further out to sea – as their Somali counterpar­ts began doing a decade ago.

Among those who sail in the Caribbean waters are the entreprene­ur Sir Richard Branson, who has a catamaran based at Necker, his private island.

Gerry Northwood, a former Royal Navy captain who commanded the UK counter-piracy force off Somalia, and who now runs MAST, a maritime security company, said the threat in the wider Caribbean did not yet seem to have worsened.

But he added: “There is a continuing ongoing level of criminalit­y, partlydrug fuelled, but in the Caribbean it comes down mainly to observing sensible precaution­s and being careful if straying off the beaten track.

“Often these are attacks where a yacht has anchored off a remote shoreline somewhere, and is robbed by someone who has spotted it from land.”

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