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This Article is From Jan 26, 2024

After Red Sea Threats, Ships Now Face Rise In Somali Piracy

After Red Sea Threats, Ships Now Face Rise In Somali Piracy
OBOCK, DJIBOUTI - JANUARY 19: The container ship, Kota Rahmat - with the destination 'VSL NO LINK ISRAEL' - approaches the Bab-el-Mandeb strait on January 18, 2024 in Obock, Djibouti. Many cargo ships crossing into the Red Sea are declaring that they have no links to Israel to avoid being targeted by Yemen’s Houthi rebel groups. Attacks on commercial ships by Yemen's Houthi rebel group, who say they are acting in protest of Israel's war in Gaza, have imperilled a vital global shipping route through the Bab-el-Mandeb strait that lies between Yemen and Djibouti and connects the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea. The disruption has forced more shipping companies to divert around the Horn of Africa, upending supply chains and increasing costs. (Photo by Luke Dray/Getty Images)

Piracy off Somalia's coast has increased since maritime security was disrupted by Houthi militants' attacks on ships in the Red Sea in response to the Israel-Hamas war.

The Horn of Africa nation has recorded five assaults on commercial ships off its coast since November, Hassan Mohamed Afrah, the director of Somalia's maritime agency, said by phone on Friday. That's brought an end to a period of stability that prompted the global shipping industry in 2022 to declassify the coastline on the Indian Ocean as a “high-risk area.”

The recent incidents included hostages being taken in December on board the Malta-flagged vessel, MV Ruen, that led to Indian, Japanese and Spanish warships rescuing its 18 crew members. That was the first successful hijacking of a vessel off the Somali coast since 2017, according to the International Maritime Bureau.

On Jan. 5, the Indian navy again responded to a hijacking incident on board the Liberia-flagged MV Lila Norfolk, by sending a warship and helicopters only to find the pirates had already escaped. Somali soldiers fought with hijackers off the coast of Galmudug state last week after they took over a commercial vessel owned by local businessmen.

“We chased pirates who hijacked a boat and after a few minutes of skirmishes, we successfully recovered the boat and handed it over to its owners,” said Ali Warsame, commander of the Galmudug coastal guards. 

In addition to attacks on large ships, at least five small Iranian fishing vessels have been targeted in recent weeks, according to Crisis 24, an international consultancy firm specializing in security.

Afrah blamed the recent surge on European military vessels leaving the area and US forces being preoccupied by the threat coming from Houthis in Yemen. Container ships that would have sailed through the Red Sea to and from the Suez Canal are now adding weeks to their routes to travel around the Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa.

Read More: US, UK Sanction Houthis as Group Vows to Continue Attacks 

“The EU naval forces that would keep pirates at bay have left the area and the US naval forces are also busy with the Red Sea tension, causing the pirates to re-emerge and exploit the situation,” he said.

Last year, 28,082 vessels passed along Somalia's coastline, according to Afrah. The Kenya-based Shippers Council of Eastern Africa has warned that the continuation of the trend in piracy could add to costs for shippers and disrupt supply chains such as exports of Kenyan tea.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

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