Lamu Port. Kenya will be handed a heavy responsibility when it
officially takes over the chairmanship of a regional anti-piracy body.
FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- Kenya will be handed a heavy responsibility when it officially takes over the chairmanship of a regional anti-piracy body.
- Kenya was elected to chair the Contact Group on Piracy Off the Coast of Somalia (CGCPS) last year.
- The post comes with the onerous task of ensuring that cases of piracy and other maritime insecurity incidents are comprehensively addressed.
- On June 20, last year during its 22nd plenary session, the CGCPS announced that Kenya will chair the platform from January 2020 for two years.
Kenya will be handed a heavy responsibility when it officially takes over the chairmanship of a regional anti-piracy body.
Kenya was elected to chair the Contact Group on Piracy Off the Coast of Somalia (CGCPS) last year.
The
post comes with the onerous task of ensuring that cases of piracy and
other maritime insecurity incidents are comprehensively addressed.
On
June 20, last year during its 22nd plenary session, the CGCPS announced
that Kenya will chair the platform from January 2020 for two years.
“Kenya,
actively involved in the maritime domain in the Western Indian Ocean,
will be the third country in the region to chair this International
platform as from January 2020 for a two-year mandate after Mauritius
(through IOC) and Seychelles,” said CGCPS statement in June.
In the plenary session in Mauritius, Defence Cabinet Secretary
(CS) Raychelle Omamo, said Kenya is keen to leave a lasting legacy from
the regional roles it has been handed.
“We shall be
engaged to build on this solid foundation so as to take the group to
even greater heights and cement its legacy as an effective mechanism in
fighting piracy,” she said.
The June session, which was
organised by the Indian Ocean Commission (IOC) together with the
Republic of Mauritius — current Chair of the Contact Group— brought
together more than 200 participants from over 30 states and regional as
well as international organisations to discuss the way forward.
The group was created following a UN resolution in December 2008.
But
even as Kenya prepares to chair the CGCPS, it is confronted by several
challenges, especially insecurity issues along the coast line.
A number of reports about the Indian Ocean has pointed to various possible maritime threats.
In 2017, a document by the International Peace Support Training Centre
Nairobi,
Kenya titled An Assessment of Maritime Insecurity in the Kenya Maritime
Domain gave out a comprehensive report on insecurity along the coast
line and the possible measures that have to be instituted to address
them.
The report further said Kenya’s Indian Ocean
domain occupies an area measuring 245,320 Km2 made up of an Exclusive
Economic Zones (EEZ) of 142,000 Km2 and an extended continental shelf of
103,320 Km2. Geographically, Kenya has an expansive coastal ocean line
of 536km.
“By 2010, maritime insecurity in eastern
Africa had caused the global community equivalent of Sh1.8 trillion and
the cost to Kenya alone was between Sh30 billion and Sh40 billion
raising insurance cost with negative effects on regional economies,” the
report said.
Andrew
Mwangura, a shipping and maritime consultant, said overcoming piracy
along the ocean needs a lot of commitment from players in the sector
around the world.
“Take an example of the
Kenyan-Somalia standoff over the oil blocks found in the disputed area
near Somalia. You might see it as a Kenyan-Somalia tiff but beneath are
some multinational companies pushing to engage in gas and oil blocks in
that area. These are some of the challenges,” said Mr Mwangura.
Kenya
Ships Agents Association Chief Executive Officer Juma Tellah said the
European Union naval forces have been along the Indian Ocean for the
last ten years following the attacks and hijacks of ships by the
pirates.
“There was need to have all these forces at
sea to address the issue of attacks that had become rampant,” he said in
an interview.
A 2009 report by Kenya Shippers Council
said shippers were paying Sh2,500 per twenty-foot equivalent unit (Teus)
and Sh5,000 for the 40-foot container to offset the increased cost.
In
2012, Mediterranean Shipping Co. announced a new piracy surcharge on
containers it transports between ports in South Africa and East Africa
because “piracy activities were becoming more and more aggressive,
consequently the insurance costs on the vessels to the region have
become prohibitive”.
It increased its piracy risk
surcharge by Sh10,000 per 20-foot equivalent unit to Sh23,000 per Teu on
cargo carried from and to South Africa, and to and from East Africa,
including the ports of Dar Es Salaam, Tanga, Zanzibar, Mombasa and
Nacala.
In May last year, an adopted report by the
Intergovernmental Standing Committee on Shipping (ISCOS) said the menace
of maritime piracy had greatly affected the region, introducing new
dimensions in maritime transport and coming with heavy costs.
“The
fight against piracy including deterring measures have also brought
about new ship operating costs which are ultimately passed to shippers,
making imports costly and exports less competitive in international
markets,” said ISCOS acting secretary General Kassim Mpaata.
“Although incidents of piracy have greatly declined, there is a continuous need for the region to remain vigilant.”
Shipping
and Maritime Affairs Principal Secretary Nancy Karigithu underlined
government commitment to enhance maritime security along the Indian
Ocean.
“We affirm our commitment on matters of maritime
security, and in this regard we have now an opportunity to make our
contribution to the advancement of the mandate and ideals of the CGPCS,”
she said.
Kenya, Dr Karigithu noted, is well aware of
the effects of trade by maritime insecurity and promised to make the
country safer for international trade to thrive.
During the session, members vowed to continue engaging efforts to combat piracy.
“All the CGPCS members agreed that piracy has been contained but not eradicated,” said the group’s statement.
Piracy has traditionally been a thorn in the flesh of maritime business.
No comments :
Post a Comment