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SOMALIA: Puntland Anti-piracy Initiative is laudable

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SOMALIA: Puntland Anti-piracy Initiative is laudable

Postby Coeus » Tue Dec 07, 2010 4:53 pm

The United Nation’s response to the Puntland initiative to form anti-piracy force smacks of paternalistic approach to working with Somalis: it wants Somalis to use the United Nations’ expertise but it hardly shows desire to base policy formulations on local knowledge and facts on the ground but gives the impression that the UN torpedoes local initiatives.

“It’s a good thing that Puntland is training an anti-piracy force,” the Associated Press quoted Alan Cole, the head of the anti-piracy program at the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, as saying.

The UN “ wants the identity of the donor, the laws governing the force, how recruits are screened and the chain of command. Piracy is a more pressing issue that Somali authorities have got to deal with. How is the training for a local anti-piracy force aimed at eradiating pirates in Puntland comparable to warlord force being armed by an unknown country? That Eyl is no longer a pirate hub is down to the work of the current Puntland administration of president Abdurahman Farole. Should Puntland consult the UN on any initiative to tackle local challenges?

In 2009 Puntand and the Mogadishu- based Transitional Federal Government of Somalia signed an agreement of which setting up an anti-piracy base in Puntland was one of the points on which the Puntland and TFG agreed. TFG infighting has made the agreement still-born. On the south of Puntland, Somali pirates held a British couple hostage for one year but released them after ransom payment. Piracy thrives in places where traditional and political leaders wield little or no influence.

Puntland’s decision to set up anti-piracy force is a message to those emboldened by ransom payments to pirates and who may try to re-establish pirate bases in Puntland. Solutions to piracy can come from the land rather than sea. Now that Puntland has formed an anti-piracy force, it will be easier to study effectiveness of local initiatives to tackle piracy. Somali leaders know that pirates’ ultimate goal is to invest their ill-gotten gains in building power-base to undermine legitimate authorities.

The heartless pirates who held the British couple hostage for more than one year can stoop so low as to sell their illegal services to terrorists to blow up ships or destabilise peaceful regions. Local knowledge has been the best knowledge to tackling local threats and this why Puntland is right to look for other ways to form anti-piracy force that will enable it to hunt down pirates.

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Re: SOMALIA: Puntland Anti-piracy Initiative is laudable

Postby muftaax » Tue Dec 07, 2010 4:54 pm

Those pirates that held and nearly killed the seniors for a yr are Hawiye. What do you expect from the lowest ranking humans. After the yr the got 750 for all that. I say America should smoke out Hobyo/Hardheer.

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Re: SOMALIA: Puntland Anti-piracy Initiative is laudable

Postby DatBreh » Tue Dec 07, 2010 5:11 pm

What will be done about the foreign nations who dump toxic watse and steal the resources that are in Somalia's 200 nautical mile territory?

By coming down forcefully on the 'pirates' you'll be leaving the seas wide open for foreigners to plunder it with impunity.

These 'Pirates' are essential to Somalia's future walahay, any mamul in inside Somalia should leave them alone providing the give some of their booty ( :lol: ) back to that local govt.


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