La Semana

Global piracy acts drop to 14-year low: report

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Worldwide acts of piracy fell to their lowest level last year since statistics were first establishe­d in 2008, a maritime security body said on Monday.

The Maritime Informatio­n Cooperatio­n and Awareness Center (MICA), the France-based branch of the Internatio­nal Maritime Bureau (IMB) which is headquarte­red in Malaysia, said there had been 300 reported acts of piracy and robbery last year.

The IMB had already reported in its quarterly report in October that such acts were at their lowest level since 1992.

In the Gulf of Guinea, off the west coast of Africa and considered a piracy hotspot, just three ships were attacked in 2022 compared to 26 in 2019, the MICA said.

In the same area, the number of kidnapping­s dropped to two last year, from 146 in 2019.

"It's never been lower," MICA'S commander Eric Jaslin told AFP.

But he warned: "You never know what tomorrow may bring in terms of piracy. We advise continued caution."

Many former pirates have turned to other activities such as illegal oil refining or transporti­ng stolen crude, said Katja Lindskov Jacobsen, a Copenhagen University researcher quoted in the report.

Robberies in territoria­l waters -distinct from piracy which is defined as taking place in the high seas -- continue at a high level, and were even on the rise in the Malacca and Singapore Straits, the report said.

Drug and arms traffickin­g, smuggling and armed conflict at sea also still posed dangers for shipping, Jaslin said.

The MICA Center was set up in 2016 to identify and analyze situations and incidents affecting maritime navigation throughout the world, and to warn crews and shipowners of impending dangers.

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