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View Full Version : Somali pirates make $150-million in a year: Kenya



Montag
11-22-2008, 12:05 PM
Jesus! I should have gone into pirating. I don't have an eye patch or wooden leg though, ha ha.

Somali pirates make $150-million in a year: Kenya
JOSEPH MWIHIA

November 21, 2008
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081121.wpirates1121/BNStory/International/home

excerpt:

NAIROBI — Somali pirates have collected more than $150 million in ransoms over the past year, Kenya's foreign affairs minister said Friday, calling on ship owners not to pay when their vessels are hijacked.

In the past two weeks Somalia's increasingly brazen pirates have seized eight vessels including a huge Saudi supertanker loaded with $100 million worth of crude oil. Several hundred crew are now in the hands of Somali pirates.

“We are advised that in the last 12 months, ransom to the excess of $150 million has been paid to these criminals and that is why they are becoming more and more audacious in their activities,” Kenyan Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula said.

Saudi Arabia's foreign minister said Friday that the Saudi government was not and would not negotiate with pirates, but what the ship's owners did was up to them.

Meanwhile, the world's largest oil tanker company warned that it may divert cargo shipments, which would boost costs up to 40 per cent.

Frontline Ltd., which ferries five to 10 tankers of crude a month through the treacherous Gulf of Aden, said it was negotiating a change of shipping routes with some of its customers, including oil giants Exxon Mobil, Shell, BP and Chevron.

Martin Jensen, Frontline's acting chief executive, said that sending tankers around South Africa instead would extend the trip by 40 per cent.

Bermuda-based Frontline plans to make a decision whether to change shipping routes within a week, Jensen said.

“It's not only our costs, but also those of the people who have a $100 million cargo on board,” Jensen said. “We're not going to make a unilateral decision so we've been debating this with our customers.”

A.P Moller-Maersk, the world's largest container-shipping company, on Thursday ordered some of its slower vessels to avoid the Gulf of Aden and head the long way around Africa.

The Copenhagen-based company said it was telling ships “without adequate speed,” mainly tankers, to sail the long route around Africa unless they can join convoys with naval escorts in the gulf, group executive Soeren Skou said.

Montag
11-22-2008, 12:26 PM
This pirating thing is mind blowing to me. This would be like if a group of young toughs set up up in front of your local grocery chain and demanded money to even enter the store (and the local police did nothing to try and stop it). The U.S. military is in two foreign wars that are costing billions. Maybe these shipping lanes that they are shutting down are not used by Americans or American companies, but the U.S. military cannot put a stop to a band of upstart pirates? You couldn't write this stuff for a script in a Hollywood movie.