Piracy: Indonesia Could be the New Somalia

By Aiswarya Lakshmi
Friday, April 22, 2016

 Commercial ships have been told to avoid shipping routes around Indonesia and Philippines amid fears that piracy could be reaching Somalian levels, according to Reuters. 

Luhut Pandjaitan, Chief Security Minister for Indonesia, said: "We don't want to see this become a new Somalia.”
A spate of kidnappings and pirate attacks in the waterways between Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines has prompted the three countries to explore the option of having joint patrols. 
The waters form part of major shipping arteries that carry US$40 billion worth of cargo a year, analysts say, and the corridor is used by fully laden supertankers from the Indian Ocean that cannot use the crowded Malacca Strait waterway.
A total of 18 Indonesians and Malaysians have been taken captive in three separate attacks on tugboats in Philippine waters along the route, by groups suspected of ties to the al-Qaeda linked Abu Sayyaf militant network in the Philippines.
The Indonesian Navy has instructed all commercial vessels "to avoid piracy-prone waters around the southern Philippines", a spokesman for the Indonesian military said.
Piracy is currently an issue of concern for maritime companies and affiliates globally, since levels have persisted in 2015 in comparison to 2014.
Categories: Coast Guard Maritime Safety Ocean Observation

Related Stories

Bunkering Hubs Along African Coast See Surge as Vessels Reroute

Sugar Futures Fall as Oil Prices Slump

Aker Solutions Wins FEED Contract for Lithuania CO₂ Terminal

Current News

Explosion Forces Shutdown of Valero’s Port Arthur Refinery

Wattlab Scales Up Solar Power for Bulkers

African Bunkering Hubs Gain as Ships Reroute Around Cape

Two India-Bound Tankers Pass Through Strait of Hormuz

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News