|
Somalia's Puntland
region says committed to fighting piracy
Mogadishu Thursday 12 November 2009 Shaaficiyah Media
Authorities in the northeastern semi-autonomous
Somali region of Puntland have vowed to step up their effort
to fight rampant piracy off the coast.
The region is considered hotbed for the menace
and local authorities have previously come under repeated
criticism that they were not doing enough to fight the illicit
activities off the Somali coast.
The chief of police in the Bari region in
Puntland, Osman Hassan Owkeh, said the local security forces
were committed to stepping up their efforts and would do their
bit in fighting piracy.
The official said the forces have captured
"many" pirates and their equipment, adding the convicted
pirates are servicing prison sentences in the region where
locates the biggest pirate base, the town of Eyl.
Authorities have presented to the media confiscated
equipment used by Somali pirates to carry out their activities,
including small weapons, ladders, engines for skiffs and jerry
cans for fuels. The media were also shown pirates in prisons
in Bossaso, commercial capital of the autonomous state.
"All these (confiscated equipment and
imprisoned pirates) should show the world that we are committed
in fighting the piracy which is hurting Somalia more than
any other country in the world," Owkeh said.
He called on the international community to
do more to support what he called "local initiatives
and efforts" in global fight against piracy off Somalia
and the Gulf of Aden.
Local forces, who are mostly ill-equipped
and underpaid, have managed to prevent a number of piracy
incidents and captured pirates along with their equipment.
Authorities in the region have also been handed over pirates
by international naval forces patrolling the pirate infested
Somalia coast.
Local courts have carried out trials of captured
pirates and have given jail terms, but some have reportedly
escaped from prison or were released by bribed guards.
Somali pirates, who are better trained and
well equipped than local forces, have recently intensified
their activities along the India Ocean and extended their
reach far into the high seas as off the Indian sub-continent,
the longest distance so far.
Several warships from a number of countries,
including China, patrol the Somali coast and the Gulf of Aden.
Pirate gangs are holding several ships with
hundreds of crew onboard for whom they demand ransom for their
release.
Since the start of the restless situation
in Somalia in 1991, the Horn of Africa country's coastal areas
and the Gulf of Aden have been frequently infested by pirates.
Source: Xinhua
|