By Keith Wallis
SINGAPORE Jan 14 (Reuters) – Asia accounted for three-quarters of
global maritime piracy last year after a surge in tanker hijackings
helped to fuel a 22 percent jump in armed robbery and pirate attacks on
ships in the region.
There were 183 actual and attempted piracy and robbery of ships in
Asian waters last year, against 150 in 2013, a intergovernmental
anti-piracy group told shipping industry and law enforcement personnel
on Wednesday.
This put Asia’s share of the total at 75 percent, after the
International Maritime Bureau (IMB) released its global report for 2014
showing there were 245 actual and attempted acts of piracy worldwide
last year.
In 2013, piracy in Asia accounted for less than 60 percent of the
total. However, attacks in Asia are mainly low level theft compared with
kidnappings and more violent hijackings off West Africa and Somalia.
The number of attacks in Asia last year is the highest since 2006,
when the Regional Cooperation Agreement on Combating Piracy and Armed
Robbery against Ships in Asia (ReCAAP), a co-ordinating body with 20
government members, started compiling incident reports.
The rise in Asian piracy last year was due to the surge in tanker
hijackings and better reporting by ship owners, ReCAAP deputy director
Nicholas Teo told Reuters on Wednesday.
“There is no hiding the fact the 22 percent increase is significant
and worrying,” said Tim Wilkins, Asia regional manager for international
tanker owners group, Intertanko.
While 114 attacks reported by ReCAAP were thefts from ships, mainly
at ports and anchorages, the danger to crews should not be ignored, he
said.
“The threat of violence is still reasonably significant,” Wilkins told Reuters.
An engineer died after being shot by pirates who seized a tanker near
Singapore in December, one of 15 tanker hijacking in Asia last year.
In addition, 12 tankers in Asian waters had their gasoil cargoes siphoned and stolen last year.
Putting armed guards onboard ships passing through the Malacca Strait
and nearby waters – where many of the attacks occur – was not a
solution and could increase the danger to sailors, a maritime security
expert said.
“Using armed guards against hijackings, cargo thefts and shipboard
robbery incidents around Singapore could result in an escalation in the
level of violence used by the perpetrators,” said Mark Thomas, Asia
Pacific business development manager at maritime security consultancy
Dryad Maritime in Singapore.
ReCAAP is proposing an extension of naval and coast guard patrols
from the Malacca Strait into the South China Sea to help combat tanker
hijackings and piracy incidents, Teo said. (Editing by Tom Hogue)