Feral Jundi

Thursday, October 16, 2008

News: Blackwater Offers Up the MV MacArthur for Ship Protection, Somalia

Filed under: Maritime Security,News,Somalia — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:16 PM

     Wow, so here comes Private Security to the rescue..maybe. I like this boat, but where is the massive bear paw Blackwater logo? LOL.  But seriously, I think it is important to note that this escort ship has the ability to send up a helicopter for observation purposes, as well as send out counter assault ships(I am assuming) to interdict the bad guys.  Will they outfit this thing with weaponry that could actually stop a small and fast moving ship?  I hope so.  

    No word on the cost of such a thing to the shipping industry, but I am sure there is some deal where they would get a discount from the insurance companies if they use security that met their approval(and State Department approval).  I am just guessing on that, but it sounds logical given what happened with Hart Security and their insurance gig.

     So maybe this is a sign that the insurance companies are finding that it is more cost effective to actually protect these ships, as opposed to pay off pirates with millions of dollars worth of ransom?  Oh say it isn’t so…… –Head Jundi  

 

Blackwater Ship

Blackwater is offering the MV MacArthur, a 183-foot vessel with a crew of 14 and a helicopter pad, as an escort for ships through the Gulf of Aden. 

 

Blackwater offering to protect ships from pirates near Somalia

By Jeff Bliss

Bloomberg

Published: October 16, 2008

Blackwater Worldwide, whose security guards came under scrutiny after a 2007 fatal shootout in Iraq, is looking to the high seas to expand business, marketing its security services to shippers plagued by pirates.

Blackwater is in talks with several companies about protecting ships traveling through the Gulf of Aden between Yemen and Somalia, where piracy is increasing, said officials of the Moyock, North Carolina-based company.

(more…)

Friday, October 10, 2008

Industry Talk: Piracy, Somalia, and Using Private Security

Filed under: Industry Talk,Somalia — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 5:23 PM

    So this is where we are at with anti-piracy off the coast of Africa.  The UN has given the plea, as has most organizations out there, that we need to do something about the rampant piracy going on in the Gulf of Aden.  But where it all goes is up in the air.  We need action, and not just talk, if the issue of piracy is to be dealt with properly.  This latest resolution is nice, but if none of the nations out there are willing to contribute to this effort with naval support or they do not have the resources, then I really don’t see how the job could be done.  Unless….. we actually re-visit the idea of private naval companies and using contract security companies to protect these ships.  

     I disagree with those that say a private force could not properly protect these ships.  My best analogy for this is convoy security in places like Iraq or Afghanistan.  If set up correctly with Rules for the Use of Force, and with good UN oversight, then security contractors could do an excellent job.  But yet again, that would take the UN to re-evaluate it’s view on this type of activity. 

    Another idea is to have private naval companies provide the boats and crews, and have either US Navy or Marine troops man the guns.  If the US Navy or whatever navy does not have the vessels in their system to perform these tasks, I am sure if they were to contract this out, they would get some providers.  And the concept below, with putting a tank on top of one of these vessels looks funny, but the more I think about it, the more I like it.  

    But back to the legalities– if the UN will only allow a Nation’s military to perform these activities, then maybe this military/private military combination is a possible solution?  In Iraq, you would see US military escorting civilian driven trucks hauling food and water and fuel all the time–let’s just switch this over to water convoy operations.  And the targeting system on an Abrams tank would be very impressive on the high seas and could be used to effectively shut down these guys.  

(more…)

Friday, October 3, 2008

News: Update-Somali Pirates Say They Will Fight Commando Raid

Filed under: News,Somalia — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 2:51 PM

 

 The Ukrainian ship MV Faina off the coast of Somalia.

Somali pirates say they will fight commando raid

By MOHAMED OLAD HASSAN 

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — Somali pirates on a hijacked cargo ship holding battle tanks and hostages said Thursday that they were ready to battle any commando-style rescue attempt.

The warning came a day after the Somali government gave foreign powers a blank check for using force against the pirates, while U.S. warships continued to circle nearby and a Russian frigate headed toward the standoff.

“Anyone who tries to attack us or deceive us will face bad repercussions,” the pirates’ spokesman, Sugule Ali, told The Associated Press by satellite telephone from the Ukrainian ship MV Faina.

Ali sounded calm and relaxed despite being surrounded by a half dozen U.S. Navy vessels and buzzed by American helicopters.

(more…)

Friday, September 26, 2008

News: Somali Pirates Seize Ukraine Ship Carrying Tanks

Filed under: Maritime Security,News,Somalia — Tags: , , , , , , , — Matt @ 10:31 PM

     I was contemplating on wether or not to classify this as Funny Stuff or Piracy or News.  These knuckleheads captured a ship with T-72’s and small arms on board, and now they have US and Russian naval ships after them.  The pirates even have a ‘pirate spokesman’ to negotiate– that is just too funny.  

     But really, how embarassing is this, to have a couple guys with AK 47’s hijack a ship filled with this kind of military equipment?  Maybe they should have taken a Dishka off one of those tanks, and put it on the bow or something? LOL  –Head Jundi

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Somali Pirates Seize Ukraine Ship Carrying Tanks

 

By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN

Published: September 26, 2008

 

NAIROBI, Kenya — For a moment, the pirates might have thought that they had really struck gold — Somalia-style.

The gun-toting, seafaring thieves, who routinely pounce on cargo ships bobbing along on the Indian Ocean, suddenly found themselves in command of a vessel crammed with $30 million worth of grenade launchers, piles of ammunition, even battle tanks.

But this time, they might have gotten far more than they bargained for. Unlike so many other hijackings off the coast of Somalia that have gone virtually unnoticed — and unpunished — the attack Thursday evening on the Faina, a Ukrainian vessel bringing military equipment to Kenya, has provoked the wrath of two of the most powerful militaries on the planet.

The United States Navy was in hot pursuit of the ship on Friday. And the Russians were not far behind.

“This is really getting out of control,” said Mohammed Osman, a Somali government official in Kenya. “You see how many countries are involved now? These pirates aren’t going to get away with this.”

Somalia’s 1,880-mile coastline is crawling with pirates, a serious problem given that so much of the country is dependent on emergency food aid, which comes mostly by ship. Thieves seem to strike with increasing impunity, grabbing everything from sailing yachts to oil tankers. They then usually demand millions of dollars in ransom for the ships and their crews.

And people usually pay — which Somali and Western officials say is fueling the problem. This year is one of the worst on record, with more than 50 ships attacked, 25 hijacked and at least 14 currently being held by pirates. The waters off Somalia are now considered the most dangerous in the world.

As for the Faina, it may have looked liked the kind of slow-moving, easy prey that pirates have hit time and time again. But its booty was not the kind that can be easily pawned off at port.

Each tank weighs more than 80,000 pounds. The pirates would need special training, not to mention special equipment, to offload them — assuming, of course, that they could make it to port safely with the Navy on their tail.

The pirates are often former fishermen who have turned to the more lucrative work of plying the seas with binoculars and rocket-propelled grenades. They travel in light speedboats, deployed from a mother ship far out at sea, and they have attacked ships as far as 300 miles from shore. Pirates even tried to attack an American naval supply ship earlier this week. The navy ship fired warning shots at them. The pirates sped away.

“These pirates are getting bolder ever day,” said Andrew Mwangura, the program coordinator of the Seafarers’ Assistance Program in Kenya, whose organization tracks pirate attacks.

Somali officials say the pirates are growing in numbers, with more than 1,000 gunmen at their disposal, and they have evolved into a sophisticated organized crime ring with their headquarters along the rocky shores of northern Somalia. There is even a pirate spokesman (who could not be reached for comment on Friday.)

One official close to the Somali government described the pirates as an oceanic “mafia” and said they had netted millions of dollars, which they use to buy fancy cars and big houses.

“Paying the ransoms is just making this worse,” said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly.

Mr. Mohammed, the Somali official in Kenya, said “this is not a Somali problem. This is an international problem. Shipping across this entire region is imperiled by this.”

European countries and the United States have tried to crack down on piracy, with different navies patrolling the waters and escorting United Nations-chartered ships bringing much needed food to Somalia. Twice this year, French commandos have stormed hijacked ships and freed French yachts.

On Friday, Kenyan and Western officials said that an American warship was steaming toward the hijacked ship to intercept it, and the Russian Navy announced that it too was sending a warship, named the Dauntless. It could lead to a showdown with the pirates, and with that many hostages aboard a floating ammunition dump, things could get complicated.

The Kenyan government, one of America’s closest allies in Africa, had purchased around $30 million of arms from Ukraine.

“This is a big loss for us,” said Alfred Mutua, a spokesman for the Kenyan government.

The ship, which is registered in Belize, was supposed to pull into Kenya’s Mombasa port on Monday morning. But on Thursday around 5 p.m., when the Faina was about 200 miles off shore, it was surrounded by three speedboats, according to the Interfax news service. Communication was suddenly cut off. It was a typical pirate tactic.

According to the Ukrainian foreign ministry’s Website, there were 21 people aboard, including 17 Ukrainians, three Russians and a Latvian. An official at the Mombasa port said the ship, was carrying 2,320 tons of “project cargo,” a term that is usually used to describe heavy machinery.

But according to diplomats and the Russian Interfax news agency, the cargo was 33 T-72 refurbished tanks, “quite a significant amount of ammunition” and grenade launchers. The supplier was a state-owned Ukrainian company. Ukrainian and Kenyan officials emphasized that the arms deal was perfectly legal.

Somalia’s pirates usually dock their ships in isolated coves, ferrying people and cargo back and forth in dinghies, which are not exactly ideal for transporting 80,000-pound, solid-steel tanks.

“ If there are tanks on board,” said one Western diplomat in Kenya, “I don’t think there’s a chance in hell they can get them unloaded.”

More worrisome, he said, was the prospect of the small arms, like the grenade launchers, getting funneled to insurgents battling the Somali transitional government.

In the past week, insurgents linked to Somalia’s ousted Islamist movement have waged withering attacks on government forces in the capital, Mogadishu. Dozens of civilians have been cut down in the crossfire, and thousands are fleeing the bullet-pocked city once again.

Somalia has been enmeshed in chaos for 17 years, since the central government collapsed and clan warlords carved the country into fiefdoms. The fighting, however, has intensified since December 2006, when Ethiopian troops invaded the country and overthrew a grassroots Islamist movement that controlled much of Somalia.

Ethiopian and American officials said the Islamists were sheltering Al Qaeda terrorists, and the American military helped the Ethiopians hunt down Islamist leaders.

The United Nations World Food Program has said that the conflict and recent drought have pushed millions of Somalis to the edge of famine. More than 3 million people, nearly half the population, need emergency food to survive. Pirates have threatened the pipeline of food into the country because of the constant hijackings on the high seas.

Michael Schwirtz contributed reporting from Moscow, and a Somali journalist from Mogadishu, Somalia.

 

Story Here

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Maritime Security: The WFP May Use Private Naval Companies for Somalia Operations

Filed under: Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 8:04 PM

 This is interesting.  If the WFP is talking about using security contractors, then you know they are serious.  These groups are usually the type that shun security contractors in Africa, but now it seems like attitudes are starting to change.  And especially when there have been 7 hijackings of ships this month alone off the coast of Somalia.  

 

So now the issue is money.  Will the WFP be able to secure the funds necessary to do something like this?  I don’t know, but it sure is interesting that Risk Consultants International Ltd just bought a couple of ships for some kind of naval activity.  –Head Jundi

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Somalian Gunman

 

 

Somalis shot as they hand out aid

 

Gunmen in Somalia have shot dead three elders distributing aid in a refugee camp on the outskirts of Mogadishu.

 

The killings are being linked to a wave of apparently targeted attacks on humanitarian workers.

 

Meanwhile, the World Food Programme has warned that it may have to use private security companies to protect its vessels from pirate attacks in Somalia.

 

The agency has been sending food ships without protective escorts after a Dutch naval mission ended last month.

 

The WFP country director for Somalia, Peter Goossens, told the BBC the threat of piracy was putting at risk vital food aid for millions of people in Somalia.

 

“The problem is twofold – the ships themselves can get hijacked and we lose the food… my biggest problem is that I can’t find enough vessels that are willing to do this work for me unless they get an escort,” he said.

 

Against all the odds we’re running a programme – the biggest we’ve ever had in Somalia – but if I can’t continue doing it, I’m really afraid that we might very well see Ethiopia, like the early ’90s pictures

Peter Goossens

WFP country director for Somalia

 

Mr Goossens warned that the country was at a dire crossroads, with the risk of a famine similar to the early 1990s, when hundreds of thousands died.

 

He added that the UN had spoken to various naval powers who might provide military escorts to aid WFP ships, including Britain, Sweden and India.

 

He said he was grateful for their expressions of interest, but now wanted action.

 

Pirates operate off the coast of Somalia using high speed vessels and automatic weapons.

 

BBC World Affairs correspondent Mark Doyle says that shipping companies regularly pay ransoms of hundreds of thousands of dollars to get their vessels released.

 

Masked men

 

The killings of three local leaders among the refugee community are the latest in a string of apparently targeted attacks on aid workers, which has caused a number of humanitarian agencies to consider pulling out of Somalia.

 

“About five masked men armed with pistols came to our camp, they ordered us to get into our make shift houses and then after a few minutes we heard shots, when we came out three of our men… were lying there,” a witness, Aden Norow, told the BBC.

 

“We do not know why our colleagues were targeted but we suspect it is because they were active in the recent protests against the killings of the aid workers – someone wants to silence us – we do not know who,” Abdow Dahir Mudey said.

 

Another elder was killed in a separate incident some 60km (37 miles) from the city.

 

It is not clear who exactly is behind Friday’s killings, but a BBC correspondent says many factions in Somalia’s chaotic war stand to benefit from the violence.

 

Meanwhile, at least 10 people were killed and 15 others wounded after fighting broke out on Thursday in southern Somalia, 100km west of Kismayo, in the Lower-Jubba region.

 

Somalia has experienced almost constant civil conflict since the collapse of Mohamed Siad Barre’s regime in January 1991.

 

Successive droughts have left an estimated two and a half million in need of food aid. That figure could rise if the droughts and insecurity continue.

Story from BBC NEWS

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Risk Consultants International Ltd has bought six Hugin and Kaparen class patrol boats for “patrolling Africas coast”. The boats is of course now stripped of gun and sensors but should be a fairly nice platform to add stuff to.

 

 

Confirmation of Sale

 

Risk Consultants International Ltd website

 

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