This website uses cookies to manage authentication, navigation, and other functions. By using our website, you agree that we can place these types of cookies on your device.
Benin, Nigeria launch joint patrols to stop piracy surge
Benin, Nigeria launch joint patrols to stop piracy surge
Posted On
a
World
Navy Force News - Benin/Nigeria
Benin,
Nigeria launch joint patrols to stop piracy surge
COTONOU
— Benin and Nigeria launched joint sea patrols Wednesday to tackle
a surge in piracy that has raised alarm in the shipping industry, with
attacks seeing crews held hostage and fuel stolen. About 100 military
members from the two West African countries at the naval base in the
Benin economic capital Cotonou embarked on three patrol boats and four
fast-attack craft from the Nigerian army for the patrols.
They will also include a support
ship equipped with a radar and helicopter.
The initiative, branded "Operation Prosperity", is expected
to last six months, by which time Benin is supposed to have acquired the
means to supervise its territorial waters, a Benin navy source said.
The coast of Benin, which neighbours Nigeria, Africa's largest oil producer,
has seen at least 19 piracy incidents this year compared to none last
year. Piracy has long been a problem off Nigeria.
Benin, with a population of some nine million, is much smaller than Nigeria,
the continent's most populous nation of some 150 million people.
The joint patrols "are not aimed primarily at arresting the sea pirates
but to prevent them from attacking the ships", Benin Navy Chief of
Staff Maxime Ahoyo told AFP.
Nigerian navy director of operations, Vice Admiral Bola Ajibade, said
that the exercise seeks "to secure by all means the maritime environment".
Two weeks ago, pirates seized a Cyprus-flagged tanker with 23 crew on
board off the coast of Benin.
According to Spanish media
-- the crew included Spaniards -- and the tanker was freed once the
pirates had left the ship after unloading its cargo of oil.
Unlike the explosion of piracy off the coast of Somalia on the eastern
side of the continent in recent years, those involved in the recent
West African attacks have so far not appeared to be after ransom payments.
Following increased attacks, Benin ordered for two sea patrol aircraft,
Ahoyo said, while a maritime source, on cover of anonymity, said that
the small west African nation is also expecting three patrollers,
the first of which should be delivered in January.
A radar surveillance centre is also expected to be established in
Grand-Popo (southwest), near Benin's border with Togo.
Benin is afraid of the impact that piracy could have on its economy,
a source in the presidency told AFP.
"At this pace, if nothing is done, ship owners will boycott Cotonou
port which accounts for 90 percent of exchanges with foreign nations.
This justifies the determination of the head of state" to secure
the Benin port, the same source said.
Fuel or oil cargo has been stolen for sale on the region's lucrative
black market, while robberies have also occurred. Crew members have
been beaten and the pirates tend to be heavily armed.
Two analysts said last month that a relatively organised gang from
Nigeria seemed to be the prime suspect in the attacks.
The maritime bureau has warned that the spate of ship attacks off
West Africa indicates the region could emerge as a new piracy "hotspot".
From: AFP