Ankur Varma, third officer on the oil tanker M/V Cotton, opened his
cabin door at five minutes to midnight on July 14 to find two men
pointing AK-47s at him.
“They just pushed me into the cabin with
the guns in my chest and they told me to stay silent,” Varma said in a
phone interview from India.
“They were threatening, they were showing the guns, pointing at us.
They took everything -- everything that we had -- including clothes,
toiletries, electronics.”
They also took the ship’s cargo. The Maltese-flagged vessel was carrying about 10,000 tons of fuel oil belonging to France’s
largest oil company when it was attacked by 15 pirates off the coast of
Gabon in West Africa. The hijackers kept control of the tanker for
seven days as they siphoned off the fuel.
While Total SA (FP) eventually got its fuel oil back with the help of Ghana’s navy, Varma’s story is becoming increasingly typical as Africa’s
west coast replaces Somalia as the world’s most piracy-prone area. The
attacks, which are getting more frequent and more violent, threaten
shipping in sub-Saharan Africa’s largest oil-producing region.
West
Africa’s Gulf of Guinea had 40 piracy attacks in the first nine months
of the year, compared with 10 incidents in waters around Somalia,
according to data
from the International Maritime Bureau’s Piracy Reporting Centre. As
well as stealing from ships, kidnappings are on the rise. Last month,
two U.S. citizens were seized from a supply ship before being released
after more than two weeks.
Taking Hostages
“Initially
they were interested in holding the ships, stealing the cargo, taking
this ship-crew’s possessions and money and leaving,” said Roy Paul, a
director at the Maritime Piracy Humanitarian Response Programme. “This year, we’ve seen an increase in taking hostages” for ransom.
Nigeria, Gabon, Ghana and other countries around the Gulf of Guinea
produce more than 3 million barrels of oil a day, or about one-third of
Africa’s output, according to data compiled by BP Plc. The region’s
crude, often so-called sweet grades that are refined into high-value
motor fuels, is shipped to refiners in the U.S., Europe and Asia.
Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea are also leading liquefied natural gas
exporters.
This year, piracy has spread through the region from
Nigeria, where theft from ships has long been common, and ships are
being attacked farther offshore, according to the International Maritime
Bureau. Boardings or hijacks have been reported off Togo, Ivory Coast,
Sierra Leone and Guinea.
Warships Deployed
Piracy’s rise in West Africa has been mirrored by its decline off Somalia,
where kidnappings spurred a response from shipowners and western
governments. The deployment of warships and the use of armed guards have
resulted in the number of incidents plunging this year.
The use
of private security may be less effective in the Gulf of Guinea because
the pirates are more violent, said Jan Fritz Hansen, who chairs the
piracy task force at the European Community Shipowners’ Associations.
“They
are becoming more and more organized,” Hansen said in an interview.
“You can’t really rely on private armed guards. It should be a more
strong force from governments. The criminals down there are a bit better
equipped and armed.”
International oil companies exporting from the region are taking steps to protect ships from attack.
“We take additional precautions on all our LNG tankers for security,” Andrew Gould, chairman of U.K.-based producer BG Group Plc (BG/),
which exports all of Equatorial Guinea’s natural gas, said in an
interview. “We have a procedure in place. We have warned people.”
Protect Vessels
Peter Voser, the chief executive officer of Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA),
the biggest operator of oilfields in Nigeria, and Total Chief Financial
Officer Patrick de la Chevardiere said they had policies to protect
their vessels from attacks.
“We are facing a difficult situation
in Nigeria; we are protecting our staff there,” de la Chevardiere said.
“We faced several kidnappings in Nigeria for money. We were able to
solve all of them.”
West African nations made some progress on fighting piracy after agreeing on a Code of Conduct to help protect trade and shipping, said Simon Bennett, a director at the International Chamber
of Shipping, which represents companies controlling more than 80
percent of the world’s merchant tonnage. Last month, politicians agreed
to develop coordination mechanisms in 2014, the United Nations Office
for West Africa said.
Sovereign Waters
Many
Gulf of Guinea incidents occur in national waters and governments need
to bolster efforts to guard their coastlines and fight money laundering
from the sale of stolen goods such as oil, said Andrew Linington, a
spokesman for the Nautilus International
trade union. The sovereign status of the waters prevents shipowners
from hiring private armed guards or using foreign navies to patrol the
area.
Piracy “is clearly a threat, which we take very seriously,”
Shell’s Voser said. “There are various measures one can take. You
either avoid these areas or when you go through, you go in convoys and
you can be protected.”
The M/V Cotton was drifting 2.1 nautical miles (3.7 kilometers) off the Gabonese port of Gentil
when it was attacked. The 24 crew members were finally released
unharmed by the pirates, who claimed to be from Nigeria, Varma said.
He’s considering a new line of work.
Since the incident, the Cotton oil-product tanker has been renamed Sky, according to data on Bloomberg.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-11-21/pirates-looting-cargoes-with-ak-47s-threaten-african-oil-energy.html
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