Home
FacebookTwitterSearchMenu
  • Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • News
  • Features
  • Knowledge Library
  • Columns
  • Customs
  • Jobs
  • Directory
  • FX Rates
  • Categories
    • Categories
    • Africa
    • Air Freight
    • BEE
    • Border Beat
    • COVID-19
    • Crime
    • Customs
    • Domestic
    • Duty Calls
    • Economy
    • Employment
    • Energy/Fuel
    • Events
    • Freight & Trading Weekly
    • Imports and Exports
    • Infrastructure
    • International
    • Logistics
    • Other
    • People
    • Road/Rail Freight
    • Sea Freight
    • Skills & Training
    • Social Development
    • Sustainability
    • Technology
    • Trade/Investment
    • Webinars
  • Contact us
    • Contact us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Send us news
    • Editorial Guidelines
Other

$195m anti-piracy initiative bears fruit

23 Aug 2021 - by Eugene Goddard
0 Comments

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
  • Print

A “Deep Blue” initiative which has seen the United States invest $195 million in helping Nigeria fight piracy at sea in the Gulf of Guinea is already bearing fruit. 

According to a report in Reuters, the incidence of heavily armed assailants using high-speed power boats to gain access to anything from oil tankers to cargo carriers in order to take seafarers ransom, has sharply decreased in the year’s second quarter. 

This after at least one Azerbaijani mariner died in a violent incursion earlier this year. 

Several other kidnapped seafarers have also died this year from disease contracted in the Niger Delta where they’re held captive while their assailants wait for ransom demands to be met. 

According to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), pirates operating mainly off the coast of Nigeria and neighbouring countries, but sometimes venturing as far 370 kilometres out to sea in pursuit of targeted vessels, made around $4 million in ransom in 2020. 

Last year alone, gunmen who prey on seafarers traversing a 2.35-million-square-mile area, kidnapped 130 mariners, compared to five elsewhere in the world. 

Suitably called “Pirate Alley”, the average ransom price per head in the Gulf of Guinea has rocketed since 2016, UNODC says, currently standing at about $300 000 per kidnapped seafarer. 

However, Deep Blue appears to be already putting paid to the terror that has made lines and other vessel operators think twice before sailing through the Atlantic off the coast of West Africa. 

Thanks to attack craft, suitable arms, related weapons technology, and even drones sporting the Nigeria flag, pirate attacks in the Gulf of Guinea have suddenly dropped off the radar. 

Bashir Jamoh, who heads up Nigeria’s National Maritime Authority, has told the news agency that Deep Blue will enable his country to secure the territorial waters of Nigeria and at least 19 other coastal countries. 

Concerned interests though have said that Deep Blue is just a patch on a festering sore and that it won’t address the underlying problem of poverty in the Delta where some 30 million inhabitants have to live on less than a dollar a day. 

Living in an area dominated by oil extraction, and heavily polluted because of it, the Delta’s former subsistence economy has been stripped of fishing and farming, forcing young men to seek alternative means of ‘employment’. 

Jamoh though believes it’s end game for pirates in the Gulf of Guinea. 

Sign up to our mailing list and get daily news headlines and weekly features directly to your inbox free.
Subscribe to receive print copies of Freight News Features to your door.

Efficiency key to logistics success as Namibia eyes growth

Africa
Logistics

It’s critical to address NTBs as a matter of urgency. – Harold Schmidt, NLA.

22 May 2025
0 Comments

Container vessel remains detained in Malaysia

Logistics
Sea Freight

The captain, a Russian national, failed to present any documents authorising the anchorage.

22 May 2025
0 Comments

Improved weather boosts soybean harvest across South Africa

Imports and Exports

Total deliveries last Friday were 1.5 million tonnes – a 10% increase on the same period last year.

22 May 2025
0 Comments

Trump meeting hailed as a ‘great success’

Trade/Investment

The president said the meeting had fulfilled South Africa’s key objectives to reset its relationship with the United States.

22 May 2025
0 Comments

Trump talks: SA delegates put on strong show despite initial drama

Freight & Trading Weekly
International

That the US President would go for the jugular about the treatment of white farmers was to be expected.

21 May 2025
0 Comments

Road rot – Viljoenskroon highlights deteriorating infrastructure

Logistics
Road/Rail Freight

It begs the question, how is Transnet going to bring about change in how we move freight? – Gavin Kelly, chief executive, RFA.

21 May 2025
0 Comments

BMA steps in to help DG and FMCG cargo at Groblersbrug

Border Beat
Road/Rail Freight

Officials said they could only assist with AEO cargo once it was in the control zone.

21 May 2025
0 Comments

Heavy lifter moves beach pavilion in feat of project logistics

Logistics

Self-propelled modular transportation ensured the building could be carried in one piece.

21 May 2025
0 Comments

Solid contracts help navigate global uncertainties

Customs
Freight & Trading Weekly
Skills & Training
Trade/Investment

“Citrus growers of the Western Cape have firsthand experience, with tariff hikes touted by the US leaving local exporters unable to compete."

21 May 2025
0 Comments

MSC acquires stake in Ukrainian logistics firm

Logistics

Medlog has bought 50% of a local intermodal logistics operator and shares in a cross-border terminal.

21 May 2025
0 Comments

Transnet and Grindrod strike R285m container deal

Logistics

The new facility will boost capacity fourfold to 200 000 TEUs per annum.

21 May 2025
0 Comments

OPINION: All eyes on Washington for US-SA bilateral negotiations

Economy

Imagine the Budget is rejected yet again, and Elon Musk whispers into Trump’s good ear: “These guys can’t even pass a national budget.”

21 May 2025
0 Comments
  • More

FeatureClick to view

Durban & Richards Bay 6 June 2025

Border Beat

Zim's anti-smuggling measures delay legitimate freight operations
Yesterday
Cross-border payments remain a hurdle – Masondo
30 May 2025
BMA steps in to help DG and FMCG cargo at Groblersbrug
21 May 2025
More

Featured Jobs

New

Seafreight Import / Export Controller DBN

Tiger Recruitment
Durban
06 Jun
New

CargoWise Specialist

Switch Recruit
Eastrand
05 Jun

Estimator

VDM Cargo Solutions (Pty) Ltd
Brackenfell, Cape Town
05 Jun

Sea Freight Import Controller

VDM Cargo Solutions (Pty) Ltd
Brackenfell, Cape Town
05 Jun
More Jobs
  • © Now Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Freight News RSS
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send us news
  • Contact us