Thursday, 20 October 2011
Piracy at record high but Somali hotspot sees reduction in success rate
Piracy is at a record high in 2011 but an increased number of attacks by Somali pirates, the main perpetrators of activity, are being thwarted thanks to improved anti-piracy measures, according to the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) International Maritime Bureau (IMB).

Somali pirate
The IMB also warned that the West African coast off Benin has witnessed a surge in violent piracy, with 19 attacks leading to eight tanker hijackings this year, up from zero incidents in 2010.
In its latest global piracy report the IMB said that with 352 attacks reported worldwide so far this year, figures for piracy and armed robbery at sea in the past nine months are higher than ever recorded.
Of those attacks, 56% were carried out by Somali pirates. They are intensifying operations not just off their own coastline, but further afield in the Red Sea—particularly during the monsoon season in the wider Indian Ocean. With unprecedented boldness, this August pirates also boarded and hijacked a chemical tanker at anchor in an Omani port, under the protection of coast state security.
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