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US calls for international cooperation to combat sea piracy

by Staff Writers
Copenhagen (AFP) May 14, 2008
The United States called Wednesday for increased civilian and military cooperation worldwide to combat sea piracy, off the perilous coasts of Africa in particular.

Maritime forces should unite with insurance and shipping companies to make it "so hard, so difficult, and high risk for pirates to undertake their business that they stop doing it," Admiral Gary Roughead, the chief of US navy operations, told AFP.

He was speaking on the sidelines of a conference in Copenhagen on maritime security which grouped more than 200 representatives from 60 countries, including navies, non-governmental organisations and NATO.

The two-day meeting was organised by Denmark and the United States to discuss ways of combatting a disturbing rise in incidents of sea piracy.

"Cooperation is the key. One country can't do it alone," Roughead said, citing the example of efforts made by countries bordering the strait of Malacca.

Faced with "significant" piracy problems, "Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia came together, put together ways of sharing information (and) began in an effective way patrolling the area," he said.

"They have essentially reduced piracy for the last five years from an excessive 50 events a year to one this year," he added.

But acts of piracy have continued to increase elsewhere around the world. In 2007, there were 263, up from 239 in 2006, according to the International Maritime Organisation.

Waters off the coast of Somalia -- which has not had an effective central government for more than 17 years and is plagued by insecurity -- are considered among the most dangerous in the world.

Ships from Denmark, France, Spain and Japan have been hijacked by pirates in the region in the past six months and released after ransom money was paid.

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France, US to submit UN draft to combat Somalia piracy
United Nations (AFP) April 28, 2008
A Franco-US draft text was to go before the UN Security Council Monday authorizing states to send warships into Somalia's territorial waters to combat piracy, diplomats said.







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