World sea
piracy has fallen for the third-straight year and to a six-year low, the
International Maritime Bureau (IMB) has said. Curbing the threat of Somali
pirates has been key.
Global
pirate attacks in 2013 numbered 264, down from 297 the previous year, the IMB,
a London-based anti-crime arm of the International Chamber of Commerce, said
Wednesday. It continues the decline since 445 attacks were registered in 2010.
The IMB
said 12 vessels were hijacked in 2013, with more than 300 hostages taken and
one killed.
Attacks by
Somali pirates dropped from 75 in 2012 to 15 in 2013, with international navy
patrols and increased ship security playing a role. IMB director Captain
Pottengal Mukundan said targeting a reduction in Somali piracy off the east
coast of Africa had been the "biggest reason for the drop in worldwide
piracy."
But he said
maintaining vigilance was pivotal to keeping shipping lanes safer: "It is
imperative to continue combined international efforts to tackle Somali piracy.
Any complacency at this stage could rekindle pirate activity," he said.
Nigerian
pirates a growing threat
While East
African piracy was down, there were increases of incidents off the west coast
of the continent. Nigerian pirates accounted for 31 of the 51 attacks in the
region, traveling into waters off Gabon, the Ivory Coast and Togo.
"Nigerian
pirates were particularly violent, killing one crew member, and kidnapping 36
people to hold onshore for ransom," the IMB's report said.
There were
also increases in the Indonesian archipelago, with attacks up from 81 in 2012
to 106 in 2013. The IMB report said it was working closely with Indonesian
marine police, who have increased patrols.
Other
attacks - described as "low-level opportunistic threats," like many
of those in Indonesia waters - were recorded in India and Bangladesh. Nine
cases were reported in the Singapore Straits and the waters of Malaysia.
ph/dr (AP, dpa)

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