Feral Jundi

Friday, December 19, 2008

Funny Stuff: Company Spotlight-Somcan FZC

Filed under: Funny Stuff,Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 5:55 PM

We are located in the ajman free zone, uae and have been operation for 5 years. The company was formed to provide coast guard services for the puntland state of somalia. We have been running this service very successfully since then…….  

 

     This belongs in the funny stuff section for sure. Three gunboats, yet less than 5 employees?  1 million to 2.5 million a year in annual sales?  Oh yeah, this company is doing a stellar job of securing the Somali coast. Just ask the chuckleheads shown in the picture below what they think of Somcan FZC. LOL.  –Matt

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pirates 

A Local Anti-Pirate Company

THE INDIAN OCEAN NEWSLETTER

20/12/2008 

To put an end to the exploits of Somali pirates, the boss of the firm

Somcan in Puntland, Abidiweli Ali Taar, is asking the UN and European Union

to give him $30 million.

The managing director of the firm Somalian Coast Guard (Somcan), Abdiweli

Ali Taar, travelled to Nairobi last week to take part in an international

conference on fighting piracy that had been organized by the United Nations.

His own objective was simple enough: to button-hole officials from the UN

and European Union to persuade them to allocate $30 million per year to his

company to improve its ways of dealing with Somalian pirates. Taar’s firm is

based in Bosaso in Puntland, the breakaway region in the north east of

Somalia that is home to Somalian pirates.

(more…)

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Maritime Security: The UN Gives OK to Land, Air Attacks on Somali Pirates

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

     Good news and I am glad they moved quickly on this.  And as I write this, 4 new ships were attacked today.  –Matt

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UN gives OK to land, air attacks on Somali pirates

Tue Dec 16, 6:21 pm ET

UNITED NATIONS – On the same day Somali gunmen seized two more ships, the U.N. Security Council voted unanimously Tuesday to authorize nations to conduct land and air attacks on pirate bases on the coast of the Horn of Africa country.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was on hand to push through the resolution, one of President George W. Bush’s last major foreign policy initiatives.

Rice said the resolution will have a significant impact, especially since “pirates are adapting to the naval presence in the Gulf of Aden by traveling further” into sea lanes not guarded by warships sent by the U.S. and other countries.

The council authorized nations to use “all necessary measures that are appropriate in Somalia” to stop anyone using Somali territory to plan or carry out piracy in the nearby waters traversed each year by thousands of cargo ships sailing between Asia and the Suez Canal.

That includes the use of Somali airspace, even though the U.S. appeased Indonesia, a council member, by removing direct mention of it, U.S. officials said.

Somalia Foreign Minister Ali Ahmed Jama, whose government asked for the help, said he was “heartened” by the council action. “These acts of piracy are categorically unacceptable and should be put to an end,” he said.

(more…)

Monday, December 15, 2008

Maritime Security: Pursuing Somali Pirates on Land

Filed under: Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 11:16 AM

 

   Here are some more hints as to the overall strategy for dealing with the piracy off the coast of Somalia.  Not only are we going to aggressively pursue these guys on sea, but go after them on land as well.  And it sounds like we have the blessing from the Somali government to do so, if the UN Security Council approves.  Secretary of Defense Gates mentions a few of his thoughts on the land game as well.  –Head Jundi

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Gates Calls for Action Against Somali Pirates

December 13, 2008 

By Camilla Hall

…….Land pursuit operations would carry a high risk of harming innocent civilians because of the difficulty of identifying those guilty of piracy, U.S. Fifth Fleet spokeswoman Lieutenant Stephanie Murdock said yesterday.

“This has become a very good business and the first thing we need is better intelligence on who’s behind it,” Gates said. More information is needed on the culprits to minimize any collateral damage from land pursuit, Gates said. “With the level of information that we have now we are not in the position to do that kind of land attack,” he said. With “adequate intelligence” only, land attacks may be carried out, he added. 

Gates also advised nations to prepare standard operating procedures against seaborne threats including piracy, terrorism, narcotics trafficking and smuggling. He said taking basic steps like speeding up or raising the ladders of the boats would be a good first move. 

Read the Rest of the Story Here

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Somalia backs U.S. plan to hunt pirates on land, water

12/12/2008

Reuters

MOGADISHU, Somalia — Somalia’s government has welcomed a call by the United States for countries to have U.N. authority to hunt down Somali pirates on land as well as pursue them off its coast.

A surge in piracy this year in the busy Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean off Somalia has driven up insurance costs, brought the gangs tens of millions of dollars in ransoms and prompted foreign navies to rush to the area to protect shipping.

The U.S. delegation to the United Nations has circulated a draft resolution on piracy for the Security Council to vote on next week. A draft text seen by Reuters says countries with permission from Somalia’s government “may take all necessary measures ashore in Somalia, including in its airspace” to capture those using Somali territory for piracy.

“The government cordially welcomes the United Nations to fight pirates inland and (on) the Indian Ocean,” said Hussein Mohamed Mohamud, spokesman for President Abdullahi Yusuf.

“We’re also willing to give them a hand in case they need our assistance,” he said.

Somalia has seen continuous conflict since 1991 and its weak, Western-backed government is still fighting Islamist insurgents.

The chaos has helped fuel the explosion in piracy: There have been nearly 100 attacks in Somali waters this year, despite the presence of several foreign warships. Gunmen are holding about a dozen ships and nearly 300 crewmembers.

Among the captured vessels are a Saudi supertanker loaded with $100 million of crude oil and a Ukrainian cargo ship carrying about 30 Soviet-era tanks.

There already are several international naval operations off Somalia, including a NATO anti-piracy mission. The European Union agreed Monday to launch anti-piracy naval operations in the area.

The U.N. special envoy to Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, said Thursday that the pirates were “threatening the very freedom and safety of maritime trade routes, affecting not only Somalia and the region, but also a large percentage of world trade.”

Story Here

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U.S. Proposes Going Ashore to Hunt Pirates

December 11, 2008

By NEIL MacFARQUHAR

UNITED NATIONS — In an effort to curb piracy off Somalia’s coast, the United States began circulating a Security Council resolution on Wednesday that would significantly beef up interdiction efforts by permitting foreign forces to attack pirate bases on land.

(more…)

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Kidnap and Ransom: How Do You Pay a Pirate’s Ransom?

Filed under: Kidnap And Ransom,Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 2:48 PM

 How do you pay a pirate’s ransom?

By Robyn Hunter

BBC News

03/12/2008

Pirates in Somalia are making a fortune by hijacking ships and demanding ransoms to set them and their crews free – one official estimates the total this year to be around $150m.

There are conflicting reports about how much they want for the Saudi oil tanker they seized last month, the Sirius Star, and its cargo of two million barrels of oil, but how do you negotiate and deliver a pirate ransom in the 21st Century?

From what can be gleaned – how the negotiations run their course and how the ransoms are paid – what goes on would be worthy of a Hollywood action movie script.

“No matter what process is taken, they always go through a middleman,” advises BBC Somali service analyst Said Musa. “And trust is at the heart of everything.”

(more…)

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Maritime Security: US Efforts at the UN Concerning Somali Piracy

Filed under: Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 2:28 PM

   Excellent news.  The anti-piracy effort should be a land and sea based strategy, and I am glad this is the thinking at DoS. –Head Jundi

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Office of the Spokesman for the Department of State

Washington, DC

December 11, 2008

Question Taken at December 11, 2008 Daily Press Briefing

Taken Question: U.S. Efforts at the UN Concerning Somali Piracy

Question:  What is the status of current U.S. efforts at the UN concerning Somali piracy? Have there been any discussions on a land-based effort?

Answer:  The United States recently circulated to Security Council members a draft resolution that would encourage the establishment of improved international cooperation between and among states, expand efforts to build judicial capacity to prosecute and incarcerate pirates, and affirm that those engaged in acts of piracy may be designated under the existing Security Council Somalia sanctions regimes.

The U.S. draft would also provide member states and regional organizations, in cooperation with the Somalia Transitional Federal Government, to extend its piracy interdiction efforts to include potential operations on Somali territory.

We believe that this resolution would mark an important step forward in the international community’s efforts to suppress and prevent acts of piracy off the coast of Somalia.

Released on December 11, 2008

Link to Statement Here

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