Combating Organized Crime at Sea

June 4, 2017

 Skills necessary in dealing with maritime transnational organised crimes at sea, including, piracy, armed robbery against ships, drug trafficking, marine terrorism and more were at the core of a two-week training course which concluded today in Mombasa, Kenya (22 May – 2 June 2017). 

 
The course was conducted under the auspices of the JeddahAmendment to Djibouti Code of Conduct 2017, as a joint initiative between the East African Standby Force (EASF), Nordic Advisory and Coordination Staff (NACS) and  International Maritime Organization (IMO).
 
15 participants from the Djibouti Code of Conduct (DCoC) signatory states attended the event, namely: Comoros, Kenya, Seychelles and Sudan as well as Burundi and Uganda from the East African Standby Force.
 
Three experts from Norway and Sweden, three regional trainers from Kenya, Uganda and Sudan and IMO’s Kiruja Micheni, facilitated the training.
 

Logistics News

Ukraine Strikes Russia's Tuapse Refinery

Ukraine Strikes Russia's Tuapse Refinery

Shipping Containerization Marks 70 Years, Revolutionizing Global Economy and Reshaping Newark

Shipping Containerization Marks 70 Years, Revolutionizing Global Economy and Reshaping Newark

Paulo Ruy Tung Appointed as Senior VP Commercial at Hanseatic Global Terminals Latin America

Paulo Ruy Tung Appointed as Senior VP Commercial at Hanseatic Global Terminals Latin America

Dassai Moon Project: Sake Space Shot a Success

Dassai Moon Project: Sake Space Shot a Success

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Standard Chartered provides $2.33 billion in funding for Tanzania Railway
Airline cancels flights due to Middle East conflict
Idemitsu Maru tanker with Saudi oil crosses Strait of Hormuz