BIMCO(The Baltic and International Maritime Council). STATEMENT ON PIRACY, ARMED ROBBERY AND OTHER VIOLENT CRIMINAL ACTS AT SEA
Background
1.
The framework for the repression of piracy under international
law is mainly set out in the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS),
which came into force in 1994.
2.
According to UNCLOS,
states have an obligation to cooperate in the repression of piracy to the
fullest possible extent. In international waters (i.e. outside the territorial
waters) all states have universal jurisdiction (ie all states can act) to seize
pirate ships, or a ship taken by piracy and under the control of pirates, and
arrest the persons on board. Thus, these states’ rights apply in all coastal
states’ Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ) and on the high seas.
3.
Effective implementation of UNCLOS in national law is key to
reduce acts of piracy and other violent criminal acts at sea. Per definition,
armed robbery can occur in internal waters and within the limit of the
territorial sea (ie up to 12 nautical miles from the base line) of a coastal
state and in such cases the primary responsibility for enforcement normally
falls on the coastal state.
4.
The piracy threat is the combination of pirates’ opportunity,
capability and intent to attack shipping. In the past, the shipping industry
designated a piracy High Risk Area (HRA) for Somali piracy because at the time
the threat was sufficiently high to warrant it. However, with the Somali
piracy threat now diminished to a low level, it has been decided to remove the
Somali piracy HRA per 1 January 2023. Although the threat from Nigerian pirates
has for a long time been high enough to warrant definition of an HRA, the
shipping industry has abstained from doing so for political reasons.
5.
BIMCO’s strategic aim is to see the eradication
of piracy and armed robbery at sea. Only then will seafarers’ safety and
freedom of navigation be assured, without the need for self-protection measures
and additional insurance premiums.
BIMCO’s
position
1. Lack of
uniform implementation and effective enforcement by coastal states of their responsibilities
according to UNCLOS undermines the effect of various initiatives aimed at
combatting piracy and other violent criminal acts at sea. In high threat
regions, coastal states are encouraged to strengthen multilateral cooperation
to maximise counter-piracy impact, e.g. by means of external naval forces
working effectively in parallel with regional state navies.
2. The
relationship and strong cooperation between navies, maritime law enforcement
agencies and the shipping industry is vital to deter and defeat piracy
globally.
3. BIMCO
actively promotes a comprehensive approach to combating Nigerian based piracy
in the Gulf of Guinea as outlined in the Gulf of Guinea Declaration on
Suppression of Piracy.
4. The
institutionalised involvement of law enforcement agencies or officials
(including recently retired senior officials) in commercial protection business
can lead to a conflict of interest between business and law enforcement efforts
and should thus be avoided.
5.
According to UNCLOS, counter piracy is a government’s responsibility.
Requests to the shipping industry to make financial contributions to
governments for counter-piracy initiatives are not supported.
6.
Paying ransom for release of crew and ship is the right of owners, and
their responsibility to protect seafarers should not be hindered.
7.
BIMCO believes that the Eastern Gulf of Guinea is currently a High
Threat Area and will work together with other industry associations to develop
a concept which provides reliable threat guidance to shipowners on the security
threat in Eastern Gulf of Guinea as well as other areas around the globe.
8.
When it makes sense from a law enforcement resource perspective, BIMCO
supports the establishment of safe anchorage areas by coastal states. To avoid
such an area becoming a money-spinning source of income and thereby a
disincentive to effective law enforcement by the coastal state, the use of such
areas should ideally be free of charge, and as a minimum any charges should be
proportionate to the cost endured by the coastal state.
9.
BIMCO supports the use of private maritime security companies (PMSCs)
when required. PMSCs providing onboard teams should be ISO28007 certified and
operate legitimately, as a supplement to other self-defence measures and the
efforts by the naval forces. BIMCO strongly recommends the use of GUARDCON when
placing private security guards on board ships and SEV GUARDCON when engaging
security escort vessels.
10. BIMCO supports the
idea of a single set of standard definitions for security incident classification
and reporting.
11. BIMCO encourages
support and recognition of those GoG coastal states taking effective steps
against piracy.
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