Somali piracy cost 35 hostage lives last year
Last year, at least 3,863 seafarers were fired upon by Somali pirates armed with assault rifles and rocket propelled grenades according to an updated report on the impact of piracy on seafarers, MarineLog reports.
"The Human Cost of Piracy 2011" is an update of a first report released last year by Oceans Beyond Piracy a project of the One Earth Future Foundation, a privately funded and independent non-profit organization headquartered in Broomfield, Colo. and founded by real estate entrepreneur Marcel Arsenault.
The report has been compiled by Oceans Beyond Piracy and the International Maritime Bureau.
"Thousands are attacked for financial gain without regard for the human cost to attain a ransom," says Kaija Hurlburt, Project Manager with Oceans Beyond Piracy. "IWhile the number of hostages has gone down over the past year, the violence faced by seafarers has remained high and attacks are often carried out with a determined ferocity – even against vessels protected by private security teams."
The report reveals that in 2011, 968 seafarers faced armed pirates who managed to board their vessels. 413 of these seafarers were rescued from citadels (secured rooms) on their vessels by naval forces after waiting, terrified, for hours or even days while pirates tried to break into the citadels.
A total of at least 1,206 hostages were held captive by Somali pirates in 2011. These included 555 seafarers who were attacked and taken hostage during the year, 645 hostages captured in 2010 who remained in pirate hands during 2011, and six tourists and aid workers kidnapped on land. The average length of captivity has also increased by 50 percent over last year, up to an average length of over eight months. Often these hostages face systematic and daily psychological and physical abuse and were even used as human shields:
The report says 35 hostages died during 2011: eight were killed by pirates during an initial attack or after being taken captive; eight died from disease or malnutrition while being held; and 19 died in crossfire while being used as human shields and during hostage rescue attempts.
The International Maritime Bureau (IMB) notes in the report the experiences of the seafarers from 23 of the 77 vessels hijacked in 2010 and 2011based on reports submitted by the Flag States of Liberia, the Marshall Islands, Panama and the Bahamas, various shipowners and operators, former hostages, and by the Maritime Piracy Humanitarian Response Programme.
"Various analyses of the Somali piracy problem have so far ignored a meaningful study into the human cost upon the seafarers and their families," says Captain Pottengal Mukundan, Director of the IMB. "This report aims to fill this gap and highlight some of the shocking consequences of this crime upon merchant seafarers, who are in the main, silent, involuntary victims. As other initiatives to counter piracy at sea off Somalia have become established, this important area of support to the victim seafarers and their families remains unaddressed. The challenge of any report of this kind is in getting the victims to recall their painful experiences and report them to help victims in the future."
The report shows that all of the captive crews were subject to treatments in violation of basic human rights and psychological abuse. At least half experienced physical abuse. In addition to those reported to have died in captivity, it says that three of the hostages died following release because of the abuse they experienced at pirate hands.
According to Marcel Arsenault, Chairman of the One Earth Future Foundation and sponsor of the report, piracy is a systemic problem that proliferates from a failed state. "While the report rightfully focuses on violence faced by innocent seafarers, increased violence has also exacted a huge cost on Somali society. The desperate situation in Somalia continues to breed piracy. Piracy will ultimately be solved only by a new global initiative to create jobs and improve governance."