The Sunday Post (Inverness)

YO HO HO AND AN RPG

Professor reveals modern pirates will have rocket-propelled grenades not cutlasses but motive remains the same

- By Murray Scougall mscougall@sundaypost.com

When it comes to pirates, Robert Louis Stevenson has a lot to answer for.

His Treasure Island novel has inspired the popular image of piracy, from peg legs and parrots to bottles of rum and chests of gold.

In truth, today’s pirates are more likely to be armed with rocket- propelled grenades than cutlasses.

Peter Lehr, senior lecturer of terrorism studies at St Andrews University, has laid bare the reality of one of the oldest and most enduring forms of crime.

He says no matter how well patrolled internatio­nal waters may be, as long as there is ill- feeling on land, crimes will continue on the seas.

His newly- published history of piracy, stretching from the Vikings to 21st- Century Somali raiders, examines the roots of high seas plundering – and it is almost always poverty.

He said: “It’s often about getting by, rather than getting rich.

“Pirates often feel they have no other choice.

“If you are starving to death and it’s do this or die, well, while I don’t condone it, I do have empathy.

“There are others, of course, such as in Thailand, where they saw people fleeing Vietnam with all their possession­s and realised there were lots of riches to be had, and they were brutal and would rape women. I have no empathy for them.

“Quite often those who turn to piracy are fishermen affected by illegal trawling – they have a legitimate grievance and start to fight back, but grievance gives way to greed and gives rise to opportunit­y.

“That is something which has remained consistent through the ages.”

As an expert in maritime terrorism, Dr Lehr says there are grey areas between terrorism and piracy.

“P i ra c y is organised crime, making private gains, while terrorism is doing similar but for political gain.

“If someone hijacks a ship and demands a ransom, while another hijacks a ship and makes political demands – one is piracy and the other is terrorism. But it is sometimes difficult to differenti­ate.

“In south- east Asia, you could question whether the Abu Sayyaf group are pirates or terrorists with the demands they make.”

What isn’t up for debate is how far removed the fictitious accounts are from real pirates.

“The fictionali­sed pirates come across as social bandits, Robin Hoods of the sea,” he added.

“They are depicted as lovable rogues, like Jack Sparrow or the TV portrayals of Francis Drake. Then there’s Treasure Island and even The Muppets version of the story, where no one is seen as getting hurt.

“That might exist sometimes, but so is being tortured and butchered.” So, too, are today’s boats much different from the Hollywood depiction – especially now.

“Waters are so heavily patrolled that there are hardly any high- sea pirates apart from the Somalis,” Dr Lehr continued.

“Usually, pirates will attack ships close to the coast using speedboats.

“It’s very hard to sail with a big ship and lots of guns, looking like a warship.

“There is lots of technology nowadays – helicopter­s, radar systems – pirates have to hide in plain sight.

“They use very small vessels, so can only use weapons such as big knives, assault rifles and rocketprop­elled grenades.

“If they wanted heavy machine guns then they would really need a bigger boat. They can’t overload the vessels with weaponry.”

Piracy continues because sometimes it’s easier for countries to turn a blind eye, or because they don’t have the resources to patrol the waters.

Places like the Philippine­s or Indonesia can be hotspots because their navies are too stretched. We don’t hear many reports on the bloodthirs­ty Nigerian pirates in the Gulf of Guinea, Mr Lehr says, because it doesn’t tend to affect the UK. But the Nigerian navy is fighting back and Indonesia “has got its act together”, so statiistic­s for the first quarter of this yeary show the rate of piracy has dropped.d So, too, have actsa of piracy quietened in Soomalia, which became a hottspot of seaborne crime frrom 2005-12. It began with The Seabourn Sppirit, a luxury cruise shipp with more than 200 hoolidayma­kers on board,, which was attacked 1100 nautical miles off Soomalia’s coast by armed pirrates on two seven-metre-lonng boats. The quick- thi nking crew sounded the sonic guun – an earpiercin­g high- frequenccy sound that kept the attackers at bbay, as did a high- pressure hose tuurned on the pirates – and the cruise lliner escaped. Then there was the MV Maersk Alabama, which was c arrying food aid to Somalia, in 2009.

What happened next – a stand-off which unfolded betweeen the crew holding the pirate leaader hostage and the remaining piraates who had captured the ship’s caaptain – was turned into a Hollywwood movie, Captain Phillips, starringg Tom Hanks. Navy Seal snipers eventually rescued Phillips by shoooting his three captors dead.

And German- Americcan journalist Michael Scott Moore wass held captive for 977 days by Somaliann pirates after being captured while rresearchi­ng a book on the subject in 22012.

Dr Lehr explained: “Tthe first wave of Somali pirates at thhis time were fishermen fighting back,, who realised it was more lucrative duue to ransom demands.

“Soon it became like tthe California gold rush, with youngg militiamen flocking for a piece of thhe action. “Depending on yourr place in the pecking order, up to £ 1 00,000 could be made.

“Somali pirates are quuiet just now, but in 2017 they targetted a trawler in Mogadishu. It wwas released without ransomm when they learned it bbelonged to Somali businnessm­en, but the incidennt shows the pirates are sstill there and biding theirr time.” As they have for centuries, piratesp will pick their mmoments and are unlikkely to ever disappeaar completely, accordingg to Dr Lehr. “Piracy can be stopped if theere is law and order on land,” he aadded. “Landborne crime is still around and will always be therre, and piracy is the seaborne equivallen­t.

“There are still lots of rich pickings out there for pirates for some time to come.”

Pirates: A New History, Fromf Vikings To Somali Raiders, Yalle University Press, out now

 ??  ?? Heavily armed pirates in Somalia reflected in skull and crossbones
Heavily armed pirates in Somalia reflected in skull and crossbones
 ??  ?? Left: pirates carry rocket propelled grenade launchers to board ships
Left: pirates carry rocket propelled grenade launchers to board ships

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