HomeAfricaHow Somalia’s Fishermen Became ‘Pirates’

Editorial Comment

Somali fishermen did not become pirates. They are still fishermen, but ones who have had to become fighters to prevent a legion of massive, armed, western pirate ships from overfishing their coasts.

This story brings up two important questions:

1. Why are there so many emaciated children in Somalia, as Western newspapers and liberal online news sites often show, if Somalia’s coasts are teeming with sea life? Is there any other answer than that Somalis are being barred from their own coasts?

2. What did the United Nations stand to gain from promoting the truth about the Somali fishermen in 2009, the year of this Time Magazine article? Another U.N. mission, of course. In the early 1990’s a U.N. mission to Somalia (UNOSOM) was kicked out soon after its inception. Since then, the U.N. has agitated for another mission there. It got one in January 2012.

Dady Chery, Editor
Haiti Chery

How Somalia’s Fishermen Became Pirates

By Ishaan Tharoor
Time Magazine

Amid the current media frenzy about Somali pirates, it’s hard not to imagine them as characters in some dystopian Horn of Africa version of Waterworld. We see wily corsairs in ragged clothing swarming out of their elusive mother ships, chewing narcotic khat while thumbing GPS phones and grappling hooks. They are not desperate bandits, experts say, rather savvy opportunists in the most lawless corner of the planet. But the pirates have never been the only ones exploiting the vulnerabilities of this troubled failed state — and are, in part, a product of the rest of the world’s neglect.

The supposed Somali pirates are fishermen defending their coasts from large western fishing concerns. Here U.S. sailors aboard the guided-missile cruiser USS Vella Gulf (CG 72) (not shown) in the Gulf of Aden direct a group of “suspected pirates” to keep their hands up on Feb 11, 2009. The U.S. Navy reported that a multinational naval force seized 7 suspected pirates in the first such action in its anti-piracy campaign (Photo: Jason R. Zalasky).

Here a group of supposed pirates flee the German navy after a frigate, Rheinland-Pfalz, goes out to intercept them in the Gulf of Aden, off Somalia’s coast. According to German media, 9 people were detained on Mar 3, 2009 for trying to attack a German merchant ship.

Ever since a civil war brought down Somalia’s last functional government in 1991, the country’s 3,330 km (2,000 miles) of coastline — the longest in continental Africa — has been pillaged by foreign vessels.

A United Nations report in 2006 said that, in the absence of the country’s at one time serviceable coastguard, Somali waters have become the site of an international “free for all,” with fishing fleets from around the world illegally plundering Somali stocks and freezing out the country’s own rudimentarily-equipped fishermen.

According to another U.N. report, an estimated $300 million worth of seafood is stolen from the country’s coastline each year.

“In any context,” says Gustavo Carvalho, a London-based researcher with Global Witness, an environmental NGO, “that is a staggering sum.”

In the face of this, impoverished Somalis living by the sea have been forced over the years to defend their own fishing expeditions out of ports such as Eyl, Kismayo and Harardhere — all now considered to be pirate dens. Somali fishermen, whose industry was always small-scale, lacked the advanced boats and technologies of their interloping competitors, and also complained of being shot at by foreign fishermen with water cannons and firearms.

“The first pirate gangs emerged in the ’90s to protect against foreign trawlers,”

says Peter Lehr, lecturer in terrorism studies at Scotland’s University of St. Andrews and editor of Violence at Sea: Piracy in the Age of Global Terrorism. The names of existing pirate fleets, such as the National Volunteer Coastguard of Somalia or Somali Marines, are testament to the pirates’ initial motivations.

The waters they sought to protect, says Lehr, were

“an El Dorado for fishing fleets of many nations.”

A 2006 study published in the journal Science predicted that the current rate of commercial fishing would virtually empty the world’s oceanic stocks by 2050. Yet, Somalia’s seas still offer a particularly fertile patch for tuna, sardines and mackerel, and other lucrative species of seafood, including lobsters and sharks. In other parts of the Indian Ocean region, such as the Persian Gulf, fishermen resort to dynamite and other extreme measures to pull in the kinds of catches that are still in abundance off the Horn of Africa.

High-seas trawlers from countries as far flung as South Korea, Japan and Spain have operated down the Somali coast, often illegally and without licenses, for the better part of two decades, the U.N. says.

They often fly flags of convenience from sea-faring friendly nations like Belize and Bahrain, which further helps the ships skirt international regulations and evade censure from their home countries. Tsuma Charo of the Nairobi-based East African Seafarers Assistance Programme, which monitors Somali pirate attacks and liaises with the hostage takers and the captured crews, says

“illegal trawling has fed the piracy problem.”

In the early days of Somali piracy, those who seized trawlers without licenses could count on a quick ransom payment, since the boat owners and companies backing those vessels didn’t want to draw attention to their violation of international maritime law. This, Charo reckons, allowed the pirates to build up their tactical networks and whetted their appetite for bigger spoils.

Beyond illegal fishing, foreign ships have also long been accused by local fishermen of dumping toxic and nuclear waste off Somalia’s shores.

A 2005 United Nations Environmental Program report cited uranium radioactive and other hazardous deposits leading to a rash of respiratory ailments and skin diseases breaking out in villages along the Somali coast. According to the U.N., at the time of the report, it cost $2.50 per ton for a European company to dump these types of materials off the Horn of Africa, as opposed to $250 per ton to dispose of them cleanly in Europe.

Monitoring and combating any of these misdeeds is next to impossible — Somalia’s current government can barely find its feet in the wake of the 2006 U.S.-backed Ethiopian invasion. And many Somalis, along with outside observers, suspect local officials in Mogadishu and in ports in semi-autonomous Puntland further north of accepting bribes from foreign fishermen as well as from pirate elders. U.N. monitors in 2005 and 2006 suggested an embargo on fish taken from Somali waters, but their proposals were shot down by members of the Security Council. (See photos of dramatic pirate rescues.)

In the meantime, Somali piracy has metastasized into the country’s only boom industry. Most of the pirates, observers say, are not former fishermen, but just poor folk seeking their fortune. Right now, they hold 18 cargo ships and some 300 sailors hostage — the work of a sophisticated and well-funded operation. A few pirates have offered testimony to the international press — a headline in Thursday’s Times of London read,

“They stole our lobsters: A Somali pirate tells his side of the story”

— but Lehr and other Somali experts express their doubts.

“Nowadays,” Lehr says, “this sort of thing is just a cheap excuse.” The legacy of nearly twenty years of inaction and abuse, though, is far more costly.

Source: Time Magazine | Haiti Chery (photos and editorial)
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1892376,00.html#ixzz1mgfNzC6l

Yemeni stern trawler (unflagged) fishes illegally with warps visible, 1.5 miles off Bosasso, Feb 28, 1998 (Photo: Scott Coffen-Smout).

Armed vessels from the following countries operate along Somalia’s coasts

  • France, Spain, and other EU countries – Purse seiners under their own flags (e.g. for the Cobrecaf company in France), plus ships under Belize and Honduras flags that fish for tuna while evading EU regulations.
  • Italy – Aden-based Yemeni trawlers financed by an Italian seafood importer in Bari; previously these trawlers were in the Somali national fleet.
  • South Korea, TaiwanLongliners that target swordfish.
  • Kenya, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia – Trawlers that collect shark as well as fish.
  • Japan, Sri Lanka – Longliners under license from the Republic of Somaliland; Sri Lanka also uses trawlers.

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