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With Rusty Ammo, Nigeria Confronts Pirates - What Is The Solution ? - Politics - Nairaland

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With Rusty Ammo, Nigeria Confronts Pirates - What Is The Solution ? by Nobody: 4:01pm On Mar 30, 2010
Filed at 10:39 a.m. ET

GULF OF GUINEA, Nigeria (AP) -- The gleaming Nigerian naval patrol boat heaved across the rough waters of the Atlantic Ocean in search of pirates. Beyond the crisp white hull, however, crew members in cheap sandals manned machine guns whose ammunition had rusted in the chambers. And a computer-guided gun on the bow had no ammo at all.

This is the first line of defense against growing piracy off West Africa.

The patrol boat Burutu, which recently participated in a training exercise with the U.S. military, is part of a force that patrols Nigeria's 530 miles (853 kilometers) of coastline. But the navy appears overmatched as attacks on shipping continue and grow more violent, and militants resume strikes on oil platforms and pipelines.

The coastline of Africa's most populous country is a target-rich environment. Barges and other vessels belonging to energy companies crowd the waters off the Niger Delta, one of America's top sources of crude oil. At night off the megacity of Lagos, lights from scores of cargo ships twinkle like an archipelago as crews wait for weeks to unload at the city's busy, mismanaged port.

About 10 pirates on Thursday night boarded a Turkish-flagged freighter waiting to unload its cargo. They stole money, mobile telephones and computer gear, Turkish maritime authorities said. The crew apparently fought back and sent an alarm before the pirates clubbed them with Kalashnikov rifles and stabbed the captain. Two Turkish sailors and a Nigerian worker were injured.

''The Western African coast, especially around Nigeria, is a high risk area for piracy,'' said Cyrus Mody, a manager at the International Maritime Bureau, which tracks piracy worldwide. ''It also one of the most violent places.''

The bureau reported 28 attacks off Nigeria during 2009 and believes at least another 30 pirate attacks went unreported, either due to companies worried about having higher insurance premiums or concerns about advertising their security weaknesses, Mody said.

Attacks have occurred elsewhere along the Gulf of Guinea that Nigeria shares with more than a half-dozen other countries. On Saturday, armed pirates off Cameroon's coast near Nigeria kidnapped two sailors from a Ghanaian-flagged ship for ransom. In another attack in November near neighboring Benin by suspected Nigerian pirates, a Ukrainian sailor was shot dead. In other boardings, pirates stabbed and beat sailors, Mody said.

The former British protectorate's navy includes several large ocean-cruising craft and smaller patrol boats that can travel up the Niger River in the delta to look for those attacking oil pipelines and stealing crude oil. The U.S. imported more than 1 million barrels of Nigerian crude oil a day in December, making Nigeria America's third-biggest foreign source that month, so the U.S. has an interest in seeing the Nigerian navy improve.

The U.S. Navy has been training naval forces of West African nations to fight piracy, even though much of the world's attention remains focused on Somali pirates operating off East Africa.

Commodore David Nabaida, a spokesman for the Nigerian navy, said the navy will continue to patrol off of the Niger Delta and Lagos. He said it is difficult to protect the more than 200 ships anchored in Lagos and questioned whether freighters were actually being robbed.

''Maybe ships do deals and sell their products, then say they were attacked by pirates so they can divert attention from whatever crooked deals they have done,'' he said.

In a country permeated by corruption, it's perhaps not unusual that the commodore harbors such suspicions.

The corruption that permeates every level of government in Nigeria may hamper the anti-piracy efforts. A retired Navy rear admiral was recently indicted for allegedly embezzling government funds. Nigeria's elites often plunder the oil money that should be running and building up the country and some politicians even allegedly hire criminals and militants to help them rig elections.

The effectiveness of the Nigerian navy is also in question.

During the recent training exercise, the Burutu was motoring near the American frigate Samuel B. Roberts. The U.S. ship sounded a warning through its loudspeaker that the Nigerian vessel was on a collision course.

The warning continued even as the Nigerian patrol boat scraped along the side of the U.S. warship, creating an ear-piercing metallic squeal. One U.S. sailor cursed and threw a blue hard hat at the Nigerian sailors, who merely stared.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2010/03/30/world/AP-AF-West-Africa-Piracy.html
Re: With Rusty Ammo, Nigeria Confronts Pirates - What Is The Solution ? by Nobody: 4:05pm On Mar 30, 2010
The army is well equipped but thats about it.

We had better start upgrading the navy and airforce to meet modern standards and immediate threats.
Re: With Rusty Ammo, Nigeria Confronts Pirates - What Is The Solution ? by Litmus: 4:55pm On Mar 30, 2010
Nigeria’s major problem, I have long felt, has to do with her neighbours. Africa is a huge swath of poverty and unfortunately, for Nigeria the information age has made information very cheap so that all can afford it. Africa is now a dangerous mix of well-informed poverty-stricken people. People are leaving villages’ en mass, abandoning old ways, which they should stick to, abandoning villages, which they should not in fact abandon, and heading toward commercial centres infrastructurally incapable of supporting such numbers. African people largely do not respect borders, they do not identify themselves fully with their supposed countries of origin, only their primordial tribal groupings and so having abound the villages for towns, it takes only a little to drive them like locusts further throughout Africa in search of relative better opportunities. I suspect Nigeria will gradually become overwhelmed by difficulties if Nigeria does not understand the dynamics moving Africa. Right now Nigeria is blind-sighted by introspection forced upon it by the constant criticism by Nigerians and dubious critics who pretend they are Nigerians. Nigeria is navel-gazing and obsessed with internal issues to the detriment of external ones. South Africa and the Arab nations have experienced a little of the problems brought about by movement of people across borders. However because they are militarily more organised than Nigeria and more sophisticated when it comes to immigration and border issues, they will not in the short term suffer from the coming mayhem as Nigeria will if Nigeria does not take borders and territorial waters more seriously. Nigeria has to beef up its defences. Nigeria needs approximately  a million soldiers and along with a beefed up police, must ensure they are well payed.

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