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WEST AFRICAN PREMIER ONLINE MARITIME NEWS SERVICES 19-05-2012
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UN ADVOCATES SPECIAL TRIBUNAL TO PROSECUTE PIRATES

Secretary General of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly, Mr Ban Ki-Moon, in a report has called for the set up of an international tribunal to prosecute pirates operating off the Somali coast. He wants the body to equally authorize the use of force in the prosecution of the piracy scourge. Other options put forward by Mr Ban include enhancing UN assistance to bolster regional States' capacities to prosecute and imprison those behind acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea .

Piracy attacks have escalated worldwide in recent years owing almost entirely to increasing numbers of incidents off of the coast of Somalia since the overthrow of Siad Barre's regime in 1991, he wrote.

In 2008, 111 vessels were attacked, and that number nearly doubled to 217 in 2009.

"Bearing in mind that each incident involves a number of individuals, it is clear that there are large numbers of persons involved," the Secretary-General said.

Although the number of incidents continues to be high, increased naval patrols off the Horn of Africa and in the Gulf of Aden have helped reduce the success rate of these attacks.In spite of this positive development, as of May, 450 people continue to be held hostage on ships captured by pirates off the Somali coast.

The Secretary-General stressed that arrangements for imprisonment are just as important as the prosecution of pirates, given the large numbers of suspects apprehended by countries' navies.

Acknowledging the difficult current economic climate, he underlined the need for political and financial commitment from the international community to not only create a new judicial body, but also to sustain it.

"A new judicial mechanism to address piracy and armed robbery at sea off the coast of Somalia would be addressing a different situation to that addressed by the existing United Nations and United Nations-assisted tribunals," Mr. Ban pointed out. "Such a mechanism would face ongoing criminal activity and potentially a large caseload, with no predictable completion date.

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