The 17,000-ton Maersk Alabama, a U.S.-flagged, Danish-owned container ship, is seen in this undated handout image, which was released to Reuters April 8, 2009. Somali pirates hijacked the Maersk Alabama. (Maersk Line Ltd/Handout/Reuters)

Somalia's pirates

The story behind the attack on a US-flagged ship off the coast of Africa

By Tristan McConnell - GlobalPost
Published: April 9, 2009 07:01 ET
Updated: April 9, 2009 19:00 ET

NAIROBI — When Somali pirates hijacked the 17,000-ton Maersk Alabama container ship yesterday it marked the first time in centuries that a U.S.-flagged ship was attacked by pirates.

The crew didn't give in: The 20 American crew members on board fought back and forced the four armed men from the ship. But the pirates kidnapped the ship’s captain.

By Thursday morning the U.S.S. Bainbridge — a 510-foot destroyer armed with tomahawk missiles — had caught up, and sat alongside the Maersk Alabama off the coast of Africa as a tense stand-off ensued.

This was the sixth successful pirate attack in as many days, despite the deployment of dozens of ships from the U.S., the European Union, China, India, Japan, Russia and elsewhere as part of a multinational navy force aiming to protect one of the world’s busiest shipping routes.

An attack on a U.S. ship with an American crew will surely get the attention of U.S. President Barack Obama's administration. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed her concern, saying, “We think the world must come together to end the scourge of piracy.”

To a large extent, the world already has come together, as evidenced by cooperation between nations on anti-piracy control. But piracy nonetheless continues — last year it resulted in more than $30 million in ransom payments.

According to experts from the United Nations Monitoring Group on Somalia, which tracks violations of the international arms embargo, “piracy attacks have become the most lucrative economic activity in Somalia.”

Somalia (see map below)  is the world’s most spectacularly failed state, a deadly maelstrom into which few foreign journalists, aid workers or analysts dare step. Information is hard to come by and harder still to verify. Reporters who venture into Somalia rarely emerge unscathed: Many have been killed; others narrowly escaped death; some have been kidnapped and ransomed; others are still being held.

Meanwhile, 18 years of civil war has left an estimated 2.5 million people facing starvation, armed militias and government forces.

Analysts say the headline-grabbing piracy on the high seas is a symptom of this land-based catastrophe. “The naval taskforce is incapable of stopping piracy,” said Rashid Abdi, Somalia analyst at the International Crisis Group in Nairobi. “Unless you make Somalia work you cannot tackle piracy. The focus should be on a political solution to the Somali crisis.”

Today the pirate groups are well organized and disciplined. But it wasn't always so.

The pirates emerged out of coastal fishing communities, which watched for years as illegal foreign trawlers plundered Somalia’s fish-stocked waters and foreign ships dumped toxic waste where no one would stop them. The early pirate attacks were aimed at exacting an ad hoc tax from the illegal trawlers. Later, the pirates discovered the more lucrative business of kidnapping.

The pirates are clan-based militias with fluid memberships backed by onshore financiers, often clan leaders and government officials. Many of these leaders come from Puntland, the northern Somali region that abuts the Gulf of Aden and has become the epicenter of piracy.

The financiers front the money for salaries, speedboats, engines, fuel, guns, ammunition, satellite phones, handheld global positioning systems, portable radar equipment, binoculars, grappling hooks and ladders. Teams of between four and eight pirates then set off.

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Posted by isaaq101 on April 9, 2009 19:37 ET

I am from Somalia and do not condone any such act of piracy, wishing good luck for those who are held against their will.
Having said that , it is time for the world community to pay attention Somalia which has been without functioning government for almost 20 years now, also is time to know the truth why a sudden spark of PIRACY in Somalia territorial water.

Reason are as follow in my opinion:
1 - Somalia waters became dumping grounds for industrial and nuclear waste for last 18 years.
2 -Illegal fishing by the hundred fishing fleets around the globe to a point were local fisherman nets were intentionally cut or chased away by these bigger ships.
The world community never paid attention to the outcry of the local poor fishermens or local people who suffered unknown diseases by washed barrels ashore.

I conclude please investigate the reason before you pass your judgment.

Thanks
Isaaq

Posted by Cowboy Bob on April 9, 2009 19:43 ET

What is the problem? Destroyer pulls up to life boat. Take all on board or just the captain. Arrest pirates. Execute the Pirates. No problem.
Senario #2.
Destroyer pulls up to life boat. Take capital on board. Send missle to life boat or mini-gun the life boat. No problem.
Find the mother ship of the pirates. Hellfire missle. No pirates. No Problem.
Where is the leadership of our commander-in-chief? This is what we get when we elect a community agitator with no military experience. With McCain there would be no problem, just some dust.

Posted by kbr on April 20, 2009 12:27 ET

You do not seem to understand responses beyond an immediate violent reaction. By now, you will have seen the reasoned response of a true leader who as real a commander in chief does NOT try to draw attention to himself. If your approach was taken, we would always be reacting rather than strategizing appropriately, and figuring out lasting solutions. Your sentiments say more about your limited notions of appropriate governing than about complex global issues, that -- yes -- need to be addressed but not necessarily with an immediate, unthought-out military response. I believe Senator McCain would agree.

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