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US Navy Stops Pirate Attack on Tanzania Flagged Ship

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Somali Marine & Coastal Monitor 

 


US Navy stops pirate attack on Tanzania Flagged Ship (ecoterra/Fairplay)

Eight suspected pirates have been detained by the US Navy after an attack on tanker BARAKAALE 1 in the Gulf of Aden.


USS Farragut responded to a call for help from the 3204dwt tanker after it was attacked by a pirate skiff, according to a statement from the Combined Maritime Forces today. It is not clear when the incident took place. 

Earlier SMCM issue 329 mentioned information from Somalia concerning an officially unreported incident involving an attack against an unnamed tanker off the coast of Oman, whereby the pirate skiffs were launched from an unidentified Pakistani cargo vessel. It took the US navy and the Singaporean commander of CTF 151 now 5 days to come clear. Likewise the fate of those Somalis captured 
by a Russian naval commando in connection with the MV ARIELLA incident is not known. Somali authorities have not been informed either.

A helicopter was then sent by USS Farragut to help the tanker. 
“During the pirate attack on the MV Barakaale 1, the crew adopted defensive manoeuvres which resulted in a suspected pirate falling overboard whilst attempting to board the vessel,” the statement said. “The skiff rescued their accomplice and attempted to board MV Barakaale a second time, but they were again unsuccessful.”

After several warnings, the helicopter fired shots across the bow of the skiff, causing it to stop, the CMF said.

A team from USS Farragut then boarded the skiff and detained all on board.

The commander of the CMF’s CTF 151, Rear Admiral Bernard Miranda, praised the actions of those on board the tanker. “The Master of the Barakaale did the right thing by not stopping his vessel and adopting non-kinetic measures like evasive manoeuvres, to deter the pirates from getting on board,” he said.  

… what is needed is naval transparency and timely reporting – not “courtesy stories”!!!
US behaves like “father” who let’s boy drive without licence and hides from mother the dent in the booth.



Singapore Led Flagship Apprehends Pirates 

(U.S. Naval Forces, 5th Fleet Public Affairs Courtesy Story) Coalition warships from Combined Task Force 151 have apprehended suspected pirates in the Gulf of Aden. The Tanzanian-flagged MV BARAKAALE 1 came under attack whilst transiting through the region and the timely response by the Master in alerting vessels in the region by bridge-to-bridge radio communication enabled ships from CTF 151 to come to its aid.

A SH-60B Seahawk helicopter, from USS Farragut, was immediately dispatched to the MV Barakaale and subsequently gave chase to the skiff which withdrew its attack.



During the pirate attack on the MV Barakaale 1, the crew adopted defensive maneuvers which resulted in a suspected pirate falling overboard whilst attempting to board the vessel. The skiff rescued their accomplice and attempted to board MV Barakaale a second time, but they were again unsuccessful. 
The helicopter intervened and the skiff attempted to speed away. After repeated warnings to the skiff, warning shots were fired by the helicopter across the bow of the skiff, which resulted in its coming to a stop. A boarding team from USS Farragut boarded the vessel and the eight suspected pirates were taken aboard the Farragut. The quick action by CTF 151 and the crew of the Barakaale prevented a successful pirate attack from occurring.


Commander, CTF 151, Rear Adm. Bernard Miranda, Republic of Singapore navy, applauded the effort by all parties in coordinating the response to the incident. “The merchant community has clearly demonstrated that they can defend themselves by being the first line of defence against piracy by adopting the recommended ‘best management practices’. A helicopter from USS Farragut was able to be dispatched and go to the aid of the MV Barakaale and subsequently gave chase of the skiff. The Master of the Barakaale did the right thing by not stopping his vessel and adopting non-kinetic measures like evasive maneuvers, to deter the pirates from getting on board,” Miranda said.


CTF 151 is a multi national task force established in January 2009 to conduct counter piracy operations under a mission based mandate to actively deter, disrupt and suppress piracy in order to protect global maritime security and secure freedom of navigation for the benefit of all nations. It operates in the Gulf of Aden and the east coast of Somalia. CTF 151 is part of Combined Maritime Forces. CMF patrols more than 2.5 million square miles of international waters to conduct both integrated and coordinated operations with a common purpose: to increase the security and prosperity of the region by working together for a better future. CMF is working to defeat terrorism, prevent piracy, reduce illegal trafficking of people and drugs, and promote the maritime environment as a safe place for mariners with legitimate business.


The CMF and CTF 151 has had a significant effect disrupting pirates in the Gulf of Aden and Somali Basin. Although the number of piracy attempts has increased over the past year, the number of successful attacks has been reduced by 40% over this same time.
  

BREAKING: 

INDIAN MOTORIZED SAILING VESSEL NO LONGER IN PIRATE HAND


M.S.V. NEFAYA, REGN. NO. MNV-2154, WITH 13 INDIAN CREWMEMBERS FREE 
(ecoterra)

The Indian DG Shipping confirmed today, February 23, 2009, with information from the ship owner that the vessel [aka NAFEYA aka NESAYA], which was sea-jacked between December 6 and 9, 2008 off the coast of Kismayo in southern Somalia, is no longer in pirate hands.
The incident took place some 170 nautical miles north-east of Mombasa / Kenya and it had been assumed the vessel was misused as mothership for piracy operations further afield.
Indian authorities had – with latest communication just a week ago – repeatedly confirmed that the vessel was still missing. 
The shipowner confirmed only today to the communications centre of DG Shipping in Mubai that the13 seamen of Indian nationality are well and that the pirates had abandoned the ship earlier. The communication, however, did not detail what the crew experienced or for what operation the vessel was misused.

LATEST:


Pirates reduce ransom for Chandlers after pressure from abroad (TIMES)

The pirates who captured a retired British couple four months ago have dismissed growing pressure from the Somali diaspora for their unconditional release but are reducing their ransom demands. 
Speaking to The Times from the place where Paul and Rachel Chandler are held, a pirate leader identifying himself as Ali Gedow rejected appeals from the British and other expatriate Somali communities worried about their reputation. “We don’t care about their pressure,” he declared. 
But he made no mention of the pirates’ original demand for a $7 million (£4.5 million) ransom and suggested that they might release the couple if they can recoup their “expenses”. He put those at around $2 million, claiming that they included the cost of 150 guards, renting vehicles and food. 
Even that amount appears to be out of the question. The British Government has refused to pay any ransom and the Chandlers’ family do not have that sort of money. But the pirates’ lessened demands have given rise to hopes that they realise they have captured the wrong people and are looking for a face-saving way out.
A Whitehall security official told The Times: “This case is unusual. Unlike seamen kidnapped in the region, the Chandlers are just ordinary holidaymakers without the backing of a big company and the pirates may well be realising this now.” 
Ridwaan Haji Abdiwali, a presenter with the Somali satellite television channel Universal TV, who has used his show to appeal for the Chandlers’ release, said that the pirates would have put the couple up as collateral to borrow money. “Since Somalis [abroad] began pressuring them it seems they are reducing their demands,” he said. 
The Chandlers, from Tunbridge Wells, Kent, were captured on October 23 as they sailed from the Seychelles towards Tanzania. Mr Gedow claimed — absurdly — that their yacht was inside Somali waters and that the pirates were simply protecting those waters from illegal fishing and toxic waste dumping. 
He said Mrs Chandler’s brother, Stephen Collett, called the pirates almost daily to appeal for the couple’s release, but the British Government had made no contact. If the Government did not pay, he warned, “they will never see this couple again”. 
Mr Gedow claimed that the Chandlers’ health was poor and deteriorating, with Mrs Chandler, 56, scarcely talking and unable to walk any distance. There was no need for the pirates to consider killing their hostages as they would die soon anyway. 
There is no way to corroborate those claims, though the pirates did release a video in January showing Mrs Chandler looking thin and frail. Mr Gedow refused to put Mrs Chandler on the telephone, though he claimed that he was standing next to her. 
He said the Chandlers were being kept in separate locations near the coastal town of Haradheere in case the British military tried to rescue them, and had not seen each other since a Somali doctor visited them last month. 
He said that he felt sorry for them but “those responsible are the British Government and the British people who don’t care about these two. Other hostages have been released by their own countries . . . Everyone else in the world is helping their own citizens.” 
The Government argues that it should do nothing to encourage the seizure of other British citizens. A spokesman for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said: “We are monitoring the situation very closely and doing everything we can to help secure a release.” 
A spokesman for the Chandlers’ family declined to comment, but a letter released to the media earlier this month said a continuing “dialogue” with the pirates was making progress.

—-  news from sea-jackings, abductions, newly attacked ships as well as seafarers and vessels in distress  —-    

No grudge against Somalis: Lindhout
Despite being kidnapped and traumatized by lawless gangsters in Somalia, freed freelance journalist Amanda Lindhout says she harbours no grudge against the wartorn country.
“It’s very important for me to say I do not see the men who kidnapped me as a reflection of Somali society as a whole,” Lindhout told a local community group honouring her in Calgary Sunday.
Reading from a prepared statement, Lindhout shared a glimpse of her ordeal.
It was the first time Lindhout has spoken before an audience about her ordeal. Last December, she issued a photo of herself posing next to a Christmas tree and a statement thanking a British security firm, their families and those who donated money for the pair’s release.
“Despite my own suffering in Somalia and without condoning what was done to me, I feel that those inflicting the violence, while certainly not innocent, are deeply wounded and war-traumatized individuals,” she said. “My thoughts and prayers remain with those who continue to suffer in Somalia.”
Lindhout was honoured Sunday night by members of Alberta’s Somali-Canadian community. The group offered Lindhout a standing ovation at the conclusion of her speech. “She’s a hero. She took the initiative to do what most people like you or I fear,” said Hussein Warsame.
“She’s a role model for what we need to see more of in times like this.”
Flanked by her parents, girlfriends, and a publicist, Lindhout was moved to tears during a slide show about war-ravaged Somalia.
Aside from the banquet held in her honour, the local Somali community also gave her a gift of a framed picture of herself and a necklace engraved with the word hero.
Following her speech, she visited with well-wishers and posed for photos with them. The media was not allowed to ask her questions.
Lindhout, a freelance journalist, was taken captive at gunpoint near the Somalian capital of Mogadishu on Aug. 23, 2008 along with Australian photographer Nigel Brennan. A Somali translator and their driver were also taken hostage.
Kidnappers first demanded $2.5 million US ransom in exchange for her release.
The two said they were beaten and made to ask their families for money until a ransom, reported to be $500,000 to $1 million, was paid last November.
After agonizing months of negotiations, the pair were freed Nov. 25, 2009. “My wish for Somalia is to experience freedom . . . I hold a vision of peace for Somalia,” Lindhout said.
… further Lindhout quotes:
Lindhout says she hopes those in Somalia can one day appreciate the freedoms she has come home to – freedom from hunger, freedom from poverty and freedom from violence.
During her speech she described her captors as “criminals masquerading as freedom fighters.”
Lindhout thanked several unnamed Somali citizens, who she said had worked to secure her release. During her captivity, she said one Somali woman risked her life in an attempt to save her.


… and just on the same day Canadian Amanda Lindhout spoke out – this was reported from neighbouring Kenya:
Police sting frees Canadian kidnapped in Kenya

 
Madeleine White (TorStar)

Kenyan police have freed a Canadian man kidnapped in the country by luring his captors into an ambush. 
The kidnappers seized the man Wednesday after he dropped his child off at school. 
Authorities agreed to pay a ransom of 10 million shillings (about $138,000 Canadian). When the kidnappers arrived, undercover officers were waiting for them. 
During the ensuing gun battle, three of the suspects were shot. 
The victim is safe and sound and wasn’t mistreated while in captivity. 
“He has been released unharmed,” said Lisa Monette, a spokesperson for Canada’s foreign affairs department. 
She added that the department was thankful to the Kenyan authorities who assisted in the rescue. 
Monette did not comment on whether a ransom had been paid for the man’s release, but said consular officials are providing the victim and his family with support. 
The man’s identity is protected by privacy legislation. 
Kenya saw a rash of kidnappings last year, though only a few foreigners were victims.
… background:


Kidnappers snatch Canadian father in Kenya capital by Tom Odula (AP) -19.02.10

A Kenyan police official says a Canadian citizen has been kidnapped after dropping his child off at school in Kenya’s capital. 
The officer said Friday the man works for an aid organization and was taken Wednesday near the International School. He says the family have received ransom demands. He asked for anonymity as he is not authorized to speak to journalists. 
Ross Hynes, Canada’s ambassador, says the embassy is investigating. 
Last year Kenya was hit by a kidnapping epidemic. Most victims were Kenyans who were released after a ransom was paid using mobile telephone transfer. Only a few victims were foreigners. 
About half of Kenyans live on less than $2 a day but there is also a thriving middle class and many foreigners living in Nairobi.

 ~ * ~ 


With the latest captures and releases now still at least 8 seized foreign vessels (9 sea-related hostage cases since yacht SY LYNN RIVAL was abandoned and taken by the British Navy) with a total of not less than 174 crew members (incl. 23 Filipinos onboard three vessels: two onboard the Thai Union 3, three onboard the MV St. James Park and 18 onboard the MV Navios Apollon; as well as the British sailing couple) are accounted for. The cases are monitored on our actual case-list, while several other cases of ships, which were observed off the coast of Somalia and have been reported or had reportedly disappeared without trace or information, are still being followed too. Over 134 incidences (including attempted attacks, averted attacks and successful sea-jackings) had been recorded for 2008 with 49 fully documented, factual sea-jacking cases for Somalia and the mistaken sinking of one sea-jacked fishing vessel and killing of her crew by the Indian naval force. For 2009 the account closed with 228 incidences (incl. averted or abandoned attacks) with 68 vessels seized for different reasons on the Somali/Yemeni captor side as well as at least TWELVE wrongful attacks (incl. one friendly fire incident) on the side of the naval forces. 
For 2010 the recorded account stands at 15 attacks and 3 sea-jackings. 
The naval alliances had since August 2008 and until January 2010 apprehended 666 suspected pirates, detained and kept or transferred for prosecution 367,  killed 47 and wounded 22 Somalis. (New independent update see: http://bruxelles2.over-blog.com/pages/_Bilan_antipiraterie_Atalanta_CTF_Otan_Russie_Exclusif-1169128.html). 
Not fully documented cases of absconded vessels are not listed in the sea-jack count until clarification. Several other vessels with unclear fate (although not in the actual count), who were reported missing over the last ten years in this area, are still kept on our watch-list, though in some cases it is presumed that they sunk due to bad weather or being unfit to sail – like the S/Y Serenity, MV Indian Ocean Explorer.Present multi-factorial risk assessment code: GoA: ORANGE / IO: ORANGE  (Red = Very much likely, high season; Orange = Reduced risk, but very likely, Yellow = significantly reduced risk, but still likely, Blue = possible, Green = unlikely). Piracy incidents usually degrade during the monsoon season and rise gradually by the end of the monsoon. Starting from mid February until early April every year an increase in piracy cases can be expected.
Actual status of abducted crews and vessels in Somalia (scroll down and look at right hand side section)



—————- directly piracy, abduction, mariner or naval upsurge related reports ——————–

BRITISH EX-SPY HANDS PLAYS PART IN ALAKRANA RESCUE (TheLeader)
A former British spy was the man given the job of handing over the ransom which brought the hijacked Spanish tuna-fishing boat Alakrana its freedom after 47 days in captivity at the hands of Somali pirates. The company set up in West Africa by the former British agent to specialize in kidnap operations, supplied the small plane from which the bundle containing the ransom of 2.7 million euros was thrown onto the deck of the Alakarana to secure the release of its 36 crew members, 16 of whom were Spanish.  
This was a different modus operandi from that of the release of the Playa de Bakio in April 2008, which was also seized by Somali pirates.  In that case the Spanish National Intelligence Center (CNI) advanced and handed over the ransom, which was paid back over time by the ship owner.
In the case of the Alakrana it appears the money was also fronted by the Spanish secret service, as the police found no indication of the ship owner having drawn funds from his company for the ransom. It is also believed the CNI hired the services of the former British spy. 
Then head of the CNI, Féliz Sanz, will have the chance to reveal all when he appears before a congressional committee.  Sanz will be giving testimony at a testing moment for the CNI, which is also embroiled in attempts to secure the release of three Catalan NGO volunteers captured by an Al Qaeda offshoot in Mauritania on November 29th of last year. The High Court judge handling the Alakrana case, Santiago Pedraz, asked the CNI for the same information he supplied to Congress’ official secrets committee, but Sanz said he could not provide it because it is classified.
Rescue effort Meanwhile, there appeared to be fresh moves afoot to free the three Catalan aid workers. Spanish new agency EFE yesterday quoted a Mauritanian security force as saying a Mauritanian citizen believed to be involved in the kidnapping had been extradited to his home country by Mali. 
The source, who requested anonymity, said Amar Uld Sid’ Ahmed, known as Omar Sahraui and the suspected head of logistics for Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, had been taken to Nouakchott last Friday under the custody of Mauritanian and Malian police. Suspects questioned about the kidnapping had named Sid’ Ahmed as the supplier of the vehicles used in the seizure of the aid workers.

Compliance Issues With The Payment Of Ransoms To Somali Pirates by John Knott

Paul and Rachel Chandler 
Since October 2009, attention has been focused on the plight of Paul and Rachel Chandler, British subjects who have been held captive by Somali pirates since their yacht was hijacked near the Seychelles. The prospect of a successful military operation to free them appears to be slim. If the pirates maintain their demands, it seems that the Chandlers will be released only by the payment of a ransom. Given the British Government’s refusal to negotiate with the pirates, and the United Nations Security Council’s concern about escalating ransom payments—Resolution 1897 (2009)—will the payment of a ransom be legal? 
Extortion under English law 
Different countries have different laws regulating responses to financial demands by kidnappers and hostage takers. In English law the payment of a ransom has in principle been legal for almost 200 years, since the reign of George IV….   Read the rest of the article at  http://www.mondaq.com/article.asp?articleid=94368 

  
Somali piracy adds $6m to E Africa cable costs in Kenya by George Mwangi (DowJones) 
Cable has had to be rerouted by 400km to avoid areas associated with pirates. 
Somali pirates and insecurity off the coast of East Africa will add $6 million to East Africa Submarine Cable System costs to lay its fiber optic cable to Kenya to improve Internet services, the Business Daily newspaper reports Tuesday.
“We have had to re-route the cable out by 400 kilometers to avoid running into areas associated with Somali pirates. The additional cost has been absorbed into the total costs for the project and we are on track to meet our April 1 Mombasa landing date,” the Kenyan daily quoted Chris Wood, chief executive of the West Indian Cable Company, or WIOCC, as saying.
WIOCC represents the consortium of African telcoms who own the largest share in EASSy, as the East African Submarine System is known.
Wood said the two ships from French contractor Alcatel-Lucent that EASSy is using to lay its cable each have teams of 24 highly trained French security forces on board to act as a deterrent against any piracy attempts, the daily said.
EASSy will be the third international fibre optic cable to land in Kenya.

Somali Piracy: The Effect Of Ship Hijacking On Marine Insurance Policies by John Knott

The judgment of Mr Justice Steel, delivered in the English Commercial Court on 18 February 2010 in Masefield AG v. Amlin Corporate Member Ltd, [2010] EWHC 280 (Comm), resolved an issue between the parties as to whether or not the hijacking of the tanker Bunga Melati Dua by Somali pirates justified a claim under an open cover marine insurance policy for the total loss of cargo, alternatively its constructive total loss, notwithstanding that the cargo was eventually recovered. In the course of his judgment the learned judge made a number of observations that will be of interest to anyone having to deal with legal or insurance issues arising from a ship hijacking. 
The Hijacking 
The chemical/palm oil tanker Bunga Melati Dua was hijacked in the Gulf of Aden on 19 August 2008, while on passage from Sumatra to Rotterdam. During the attack one of the 39-member crew (29 Malaysians and 10 Filipinos) was killed….
Rest of the article see: http://www.mondaq.com/article.asp?articleid=94366


Ocean cargo/global logistics: Piracy shift suggests lack of adequate enforcement 
This is also the second year in a row where incidents in the Singapore Straits have increased
 by Patrick Burnson (Logistics Management)

 

Maritime security experts are reporting a significant shift in the area of pirate attacks off Somalia. As noted in “Critical Cargoes,” piracy continues to escalate worldwide, but last year more vessels were also being targeted along the east coast of the troubled African nation. 
Since October increased activity has been observed in the Indian Ocean with 33 incidents reported, including 13 hijackings. Thirteen of these last quarter incidents occurred east of the recommended east of 60° east — including four hijacked vessels. Many of these attacks have occurred at distances of approximately 1000 nautical miles off Mogadishu. 
In the 2009 annual piracy report issued by the ICC International Maritime Bureau’s Piracy ReportingCenter (IMB PRC), it is noted that 28 incidents were reported for Nigeria. Of these 21 vessels were boarded, three vessels were fired upon, one vessel was hijacked and three Masters reported an attempted attack on their vessel. One crew was reported killed as the robbers tried to escape after looting the vessel. Vessels attacked include, general cargo, bulk carriers, reefers, and all types of tankers. The majority of incidents related to the oil industry and fishing vessels go unreported. Information from external sources would suggest at least a further 30 unreported attacks occurred in Nigeria in 2009. 
IMB Director, Captain Pottengal Mukundan, stated that the Nigerian attacks are much more violent in nature than Somalia, localized but with the capacity to attack vessels and installations further from the coast. 
“The incidence of violent attacks against ships has also spilled over into neighboring states,” he said. 
This is the second year in a row where incidents in the Singapore Straits have increased. Nine incidents were reported in 2009 as compared to six in 2008. Of these six vessels were boarded and three reported attempted attacks. 
Even though there has been significant improvement in the safety and security of the Southeast Asian and Far East waters there still remains an underlying potential for incidents to increase without any prior warning. The pressure on the pirates and the robbers has to be maintained by the littoral states and the constant physical presence in the waters,  said IMB spokesmen.


Pirates reach the Seychelles by Tristan McConnell (GlobalPost)

The Seychelles feels like the furthest from anywhere you have ever been: Thousands of miles of open Indian Ocean water stretch in every direction. That isolation is partly why the 115-island archipelago has become such a popular holiday destination.

More than 900 miles off the coast of East Africa, the Seychelles is known for its paradise beaches, crystal waters, coral reefs and soaring granite peaks. The islands attract honeymooners and wealthy tourists to the many five-star resorts spread across the archipelago. 
Recently, however, the Seychelles has earned another reputation, one it is eager to shake off. Somali pirates are a dangerous scourge of the seas grabbing vessels and mariners for ransom. In the Seychelles the pirate gangs that motor across the ocean are holding the remote country’s future hostage. 
“Piracy is a real threat to the livelihoods of the Seychelles people,” finance minister Danny Faure told GlobalPost. “Tourism and fishing are the twin pillars of our economy, both of which need safe seas.” 
A retired British couple was abducted aboard their boat Lynn Rival just 60 miles off the Seychelles coast last October and are still being held captive on the Somali mainland. The incident scared both private seafarers and tourists. 
Attacks on bigger yachts such as the French-flagged Le Ponant in 2008 hit demand for luxury cruises explaining the many empty berths at the new Eden Park marina built on reclaimed land in the Seychelles capital Victoria. Numerous hijackings of the fishing boats that trawl the rich Indian Ocean waters around the islands have sent the trawlers elsewhere in search of safer seas. 
Somali pirates never used to reach as far as the Seychelles. But in late 2008 international navies stepped up patrols in the Gulf of Aden to protect the 22,000 ships that pass through the Suez Canal each year. 
Their success had a “balloon effect.” Pirate gangs felt the squeeze and moved deeper into the Indian Ocean, ever closer to the coral and granite Seychelles archipelago. In recent months the greatest number of pirate attacks have taken place around the Seychelles. 
As piracy shakes the country’s economic pillars the government is spending millions to shore them up. Last year Faure allocated an extra $2.8 million to the military and coast guard, this year it will be $3 million. “Government has had to plow resources into maritime surveillance but we are not generating. 
“We have a direct threat to our fisheries and our tourism, and at the same time we need to spend the resources on being more vigilant,” he said.
The Seychelles does not have resources to spare. When piracy hit, the economy was already in a fragile state. After defaulting on debt repayments in 2008 foreign exchange controls were removed, the Seychellois rupee lost more than half its value and inflation soared to over 63 percent. Pretty much everything must be imported to the Seychelles islands so the impact on ordinary people was severe. 
The Central Bank Governor was sacked, state subsidies on public transport, fuel and utilities were removed — causing prices to shoot up — and a privatization program began selling off everything from the overstaffed Seychelles Marketing Board to a peculiar array of government-owned businesses including a butcher’s shop, a ketchup factory and a chick hatchery. 
Just as these shock tactics were beginning to stabilize the economy the pirates arrived, frightening away fishermen and tourists alike. 
The tuna industry has been worst hit. The catch of yellowfin, skipjack and bigeye tuna from within the Seychelles 540,000 square mile exclusive economic zone has fallen by 45 percent which has a knock-on effect on port revenue, which is down 30 percent from last year, and fishing license fees, worth up to $15 million a year. 
Huge French, Spanish and Seychellois flagged purse-seine trawlers still unload their catch at Port Victoria’s bustling canning factory — the biggest in the Indian Ocean — but fishery officials say that a fifth of the vessels left the tuna fleet last year because of maritime insecurity. 
Those that come pay additional piracy insurance and spend money on armed French marines and private security guards who have successfully thwarted attacks since they were first permitted aboard the tuna fleet last year. 
“Piracy has caused a significant loss of production,” Michel Goujon, director of French trawler owners’ association Orthongel, told an international tuna conference in the Seychelles this month [February]. 
“[As] piracy developed around the Seychelles so pirates were waiting for us and the crews did not feel at all safe,” he said. But Goujon added that the decision to allow armed guards on tuna trawlers meant that boats could now “resume their activities in safe conditions.”

 

EU NAVFOR Welcomes French Warship FS NIVÔSE In Operation Atalanta (eu)

On 17th of February, FS NIVÔSE left her home port of La Reunion to join the European Naval Force Somalia – Operation ATALANTA (EU NAVFOR). 
On leaving port, the warship performed an intense series of drills and training serials to prepare the crew for the demanding anti piracy task ahead in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean.
This is the second time that FS NIVÔSE has participated in Operation Atalanta. Last year the ship was involved in the arrest of 11 pirates after the 21,000 tonne Liberia flagged MV SAFMARINE ASIA came under sustained small arms and Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG) attack from two skiffs that were operating in close company with a mother ship. In a separate incident, the arrest of another 11 pirates took place with the cooperation of a EU NAVFOR Spanish Maritime Patrol Aircraft.
[N.B.: Since the fatal shooting of French skipper Florent Lemaçon, whose case investigation has still neither been secluded nor concluded and since a French agent is still missing in action somewhere in southern Somalia, the French have been very quiet on the anti-piracy front.]
 

Persian Gulf: British Navy Practices “Combat Preparedness” In UAE
UAE-UK navies conduct joint marine exercise 
(KhaleejTimes)
ABU DHABI: Emirati and British navies are currently engaging in a two-week joint marine exercise on the UAE waters.
Code-named “Sea Khanjar”, the war games are being held from 15 to 27 February 2010 as part of a plan seeking to upgrade joint marine training and raise combat preparedness of the these forces. 
These marine drills will strengthen joint action between the UAE armed forces and their counterparts in friendly countries, contribute to further enhancing joint military coordination and cooperation with the aim of continued assimilation and understanding of new tactics, gears and equipment. Such military exercise demonstrate the UAE Armed Forces’ firm commitment to keeping in touch with the latest technology. ….
Commander of the Amphibious Task Force (CATF) Comander Mike Peterson Royal Navy from the Joint Force Headquarters (JFHQ) said: “The UK is committed in its cooperation with the UAE and execises such as Sea Khanjar will only serve to strengthen that cooperation.”

VIDEO: Will US-NATO Start World War III by Attacking Iran? by Michel Chossudovsky (GlobalResearch)
Video:
http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=C4p1kD8CZX8& feature=player_ embedded
A UN nuclear watchdog report suggests Iran could be developing a nuclear bomb, apparently confirming long-held suspicions in the West. But Tehran denies the claims, again insisting that its atomic intentions are peaceful. 
Michel Chossudovsky, who’s from an independent Canadian policy research group, believes that what Iran says hardly matters, because the U.S. is planning for war.
 

… the Nintendo-boys-genaration outgrows their once harmless games:
NATO Agrees On Cyber Warfare Plan With Ukraine 
NATO and Ukrainian experts discuss cyber defence
 (NorthAtlanticTreatyOrganization)
Both the Ukrainian and NATO Co-Chairmen of the expert staff talks noted that Ukraine is the first NATO Partner country to approach the Alliance with a request to launch co-operation in this area.
On 11-12 February 2010, cyber defence experts from Ukraine, NATO and Allied countries participated in the first NATO-Ukraine Expert Staff Talks on Cyber Defence in Kyiv. Held under the auspices of the NATO-Ukraine Joint Working Group on Defence Reform, the staff talks were co-organised by Ukraine’s National Security and Defence Council and the NATO Liaison Office in Ukraine. 
The event’s participants were greeted by the Ukrainian Co-Chairman of the NATO-Ukraine Joint Working Group on Defence Reform, First Deputy Secretary of the National Security and Defence Council, Stepan Havrysh….
Both the Ukrainian and NATO Co-Chairmen of the expert staff talks noted that Ukraine is the first NATO Partner country to approach the Alliance with a request to launch co-operation in this area. The Alliance appreciates the initiative and is ready on its part to contribute to the series of staff talks planned for this year…..
As a result of the two-day discussions in Kyiv, it was agreed by Ukrainian and NATO representatives that the constructive and open atmosphere demonstrated at the staff talks provided an excellent opportunity for sharing expertise and knowledge in the area of cyber defence, which is currently demanding increased attention of each and every country and organisation. Participants agreed on a work plan for this year, which identifies the specific areas of cooperation.


——– ecology, ecosystems, marine environment, IUU fishing and dumping, UNCLOS ———— 

COMMUNITIES AND FORESTS 
Africa: The huge value of mangroves for communities 
Africa is richly endowed with mangroves, which cover over 3.2 million hectares, extending from Mauritania to Angola on the Atlantic coast and from Somalia to South Africa along the Indian Ocean. 
Mangrove forests have a huge value for coastal communities that derive their livelihoods from them. Although commonly defined as “poor” in official statistics, communities living in healthy mangrove areas have what many urban people lack: diverse and abundant food. Mangroves provide for many of their needs, usually complemented with other productive activities such as farming, poultry, bee-farming and so on. Mangrove wood is a multi-purpose resource for fish stakes, fish traps, boat building, boat paddles, yam stakes, fencing, carvings, building timber, fuel and many other uses. 
The Rufiji River Delta mangroves provide a good example on the above. Located in southern Tanzania, it is the largest delta in Eastern Africa and contains the largest estuarine mangrove forest on the eastern seaboard of the African continent. The Delta region is home to over thirty thousand people who live, farm and fish in its fertile agricultural lands and rich fishing grounds. The latter produce over 80 per cent of Tanzania’s prawn exports with the entire catch being wild prawns. 
The importance of mangroves for local communities becomes even clearer when they are degraded or disappear. In the case of Senegal, oysters, shrimp, tilapia, barracuda and catfish are among the many fish species that live in Casamance’s mangrove forests, but now, as a result of mangrove degradation “you can only find big fish, as well as shrimps and oysters, but you can no longer find catfish or other varieties, while there used to be plenty.” 
The depletion of fish stocks has particularly affected women who sell fish in bulk: “Women are closely involved in the fishing economy in this region. We sell fish, shrimp and oysters in the market and can earn up to US$20 a day from this, which greatly benefits our families. Now it is difficult for fish-sellers in Ziguinchor markets to earn even US$4 a day because there is so little fish left to sell.” 
The disappearance of mangroves harms other crops as well. Fewer mangroves means increased salt content of the water, which impedes the growth of paddy rice. “When we plant the rice now, it doesn’t grow because there is so much salt in the water.” 
Regarding biodiversity, mangrove forests have few tree species to show (6 to 10), which may lead people to think that they are biodiversity-poor. In fact, they are exactly the opposite: mangroves are an irreplaceable and unique ecosystem, hosting incredible biodiversity and ranking among the most productive ecosystems in the world. The aerial roots of their trees form a complex web, hosting a multitude of animal species (fish, molluscs, crustaceans) and they operate as zones for mating, refuges and nursery areas for a large number of other species. The enormous quantities of fish and invertebrates that live in these coastal waters, provide an abundance of food for monkeys, turtles, and aquatic birds and they serve as an important migratory point for many birds. 
Many species of animals use the Baly Bay’s 7200 hectares of mangroves as nesting, roosting and feeding areas. Located to the West coast of Madagascar, the bay’ mangroves constitute an important habitat for crab and shrimp species. 
By some estimates, over 60% of fishes caught between the Gulf of Guinea and Angola breed in the mangrove belt of the Niger Delta. Mangroves have been sustainably managed by the many generations of communities living there. Sustainable use has been possible because of their profound knowledge about this ecosystem, passed on from generation to generation. 
However, a number of changes have taken place over the last few decades that have resulted in mangrove destruction or degradation in many countries. Two different processes (frequently related) affecting mangroves can be observed: total destruction or degradation. 
In some cases their total destruction may be due to urbanization, large-scale tourism undertakings, rice production or their eradication to give way to commercial shrimp farming. According to the FAO, Africa has lost about 500,000 hectares of mangroves over the last 25 years. 
In other cases, partial deforestation is further aggravated by mangrove degradation – where most trees may remain standing – due to activities such as oil exploitation or mining. That is to say, the installation of pipelines, seismic exploration and open cast mines cause deforestation; while oil-spills, gas flaring and waste dumping pollute the water and the air and seriously degrade the ecosystem as a whole. Another important cause of “invisible” degradation is the use of agro-toxics in nearby agricultural production, where toxic chemicals end up in this ecosystem, thus resulting in severe impacts on mangrove biodiversity and peoples’ livelihoods. 
In terms of degradation, major oil spills have occurred that have devastated rivers, killed mangroves and coastal life and affected the health and livelihoods of millions of inhabitants. Although this has happened in several countries in both Eastern and Western Africa, the case of the Niger Delta is probably the worst. As denounced by Amnesty International, the local communities living there rely on “the land and natural waterways for their livelihood and sustenance. Now, they have to drink, cook with and wash in polluted water and eat fish contaminated with toxins. They have lost farming land and their incomes from oil spills and breathe air that reeks of oil, gas and other pollutants.” 
A further form of mangrove degradation results from overexploitation of its resources –both the trees themselves or the fish and other aquatic life forms that live there. In Africa, excessive mangrove wood extraction has been linked to fish smoking, building materials, fuelwood and charcoal production. 
Within that context, efforts should be made to ensure sustainable use of existing mangroves, to restore degraded areas and to replant mangrove forests whenever possible and viable. 
For the above to be possible, the necessary starting point is to identify and address all the direct and underlying causes of mangrove loss and degradation. In this respect, it is important to note that while most of the former have already been identified, the underlying causes are still a matter of debate that needs to be studied much further. Such analysis is fundamental in order to avoid the easy solution of putting the blame on “poverty” or “population growth”, while obscuring the role of governments, international institutions and corporations in mangrove loss and degradation. 
While existing problems are addressed, it would be wise to prevent the development of new ones. In this respect, policies should be adopted and implemented to stop the expansion of unsustainable industrial shrimp farming, which is now looking at Africa’s mangrove areas as a new business opportunity to be exploited with little regard to the ecosystem. The negative social and environmental impacts of this activity are already well documented in all the countries where it has established itself, particularly in Latin America and Asia. The result, in country after country, is that industrial shrimp farming destroys mangroves, biodiversity and local peoples’ livelihoods. The impacts of the few existing cases of industrial shrimp farming in Africa should also serve as a basis for convincing governments on this issue. 
African mangroves should be allowed to continue to play the role they have traditionally played: to ensure local peoples’ livelihoods through the conservation and wise use of their rich biodiversity. 
(*) Summarized version of “African mangroves: their importance for people and biodiversity”, by Ricardo Carrere, editorial of “The relevance of mangrove forests to African fisheries, wildlife and water resources”, Nature & Faune Volume 24, Issue 1. The full article with footnotes, quoted sources and references is available atftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/012/ak995e/ak995e00.pdf
Communities who want to benefit from ECOTERRA’s Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden Mangrove Action Programme, please write to africanode[at]ecoterra.net (you have to verify your mail if you write for the first time. New intake of communities from Somalia, Kenya and Tanzania.



Whaling: A draft of cold comfort? by Richard Black (BBC)
The International Whaling Commission (IWC) has unveiled detailed proposals on how whaling could be regulated in a way that countries still engaged in the hunt and those opposed to it could both live with.
The essential dilemma is what it has been for decades: some societies view the whale as just another wild animal to be hunted, whereas for others it is a special emblem of a troubled environment, a sentient friend that should never feel the thud of a harpoon.

However, the often acrimonious and sometimes violent impasse has induced some people in both camps to explore a possible “compromise package” that both could live with in peace, if not in ecstasy. 
Over the last few years I’ve regularly documented the “peace process” aimed at finding such a compromise; and the current proposals, prepared by a group of 12 countries including strongly pro Japan, strongly anti Australia and lukewarm US, constitute the latest and most detailed contribution. 
If implemented, the draft would usher in a 10-year period where all hunting for the “great whales” would come “under the control of the IWC”. That means the commission would set ceilings on quotas, mandate and monitor a programme of international observers on some vessels, require DNA sampling of meat from markets, and so on. 
Much of the recommendations would be pretty much uncontested – there is no real disagreement, for example, over the use of observers, as there once was – and some of the overall objectives set for the IWC, such as the restoration of depleted stocks, are very much in what Americans might term the “Mom and apple pie” category. 
But there are also profound difficulties – some of principle, others of politics – and early rumblings indicate they are potentially big enough to prevent IWC members from adopting this draft. 
For anti-whaling countries and organisations, one of the lures of this draft deal is that they would have some say over what quotas should be set for Iceland, Japan and Norway, which currently set their own quotas and which have allowed themselves regular increases in recent years. 
But as yet the report contains no numbers, not even suggestions, for what those quotas might be. 
The draft’s key criterion is that hunts should be sustainable. The IWC does have up its sleeve scientific ways of evaluating that - one of them is routinely deployed to determine quotas for subsistence whaling by indigenous peoples – and despite important questions over the impacts that climate change might have on whale numbers, and although evaluations are not in a state of complete readiness for all whale species in all areas, you can see in principle that quotas based on sustainability could be issued at whatever degree of confidence within a few years. 
However, quotas currently set by Iceland, Japan and Norway are determined as much by political and commercial considerations as by scientific sustainability. Some are probably lower than a precautionary definition of “sustainability” would imply, others probably higher. 
And the “peace process” is also essentially political in nature, with the various governments involved only prepared to endorse it if they gain more than they lose. 
So political considerations must come into the IWC’s quota setting. 
If the proposals were adopted, then, anti-whaling governments would find themselves partaking in the setting of quotas for hunts that according to their own beliefs ought not to exist at all, and in the knowledge that they will be probably be excoriated by environment groups on an issue where public opinion in their countries is pretty firmly on the environment groups’ side. 
Meanwhile, governments of hunting nations would have to be prepared to accept quotas that are below levels urged by companies operating the hunts. This could be a particularly thorny problem in Iceland where the whaling industry is urging the public to see it as a creator of wealth and employment in a time of economic hardship. 
The biggest issue of principle, meanwhile, is that this plan would not remove or even phase out whaling in the Southern Ocean, where Japanese harpoons are busiest
The Southern Ocean was declared a “whale sanctuary” in 1994. Japan’s reasoning for continuing to hunt there is that the sanctuary regulation doesn’t cover scientific whaling. 
The draft report, in fact, contains a huge contradiction. A new sanctuary would be set up in the South Atlantic, where whaling does not happen now and is extremely unlikely to start, but does not ban whaling from the existing sanctuary in the Southern Ocean, where it does. 
There’s something to be said for giving goodies even-handedly to each side in an argument; but when the goodies contradict each other to this extent, you have to wonder whether at least one will find the package unpalatable. 
A related issue is that anti-whaling countries hope Japan will have ended its Antarctic hunt within 10 years anyway. 
The Nisshin Maru, the factory ship, is ageing, and no decision has yet been taken on whether to build a replacement. Agreed internationally-sanctioned quotas for 10 years, environment groups will argue, might help tip the balance in favour – an investment that would ensure Antarctic whaling continued for a lot longer. 
One area where the draft is likely to find favour with both pro- and anti-whaling blocs is that for the next 10 years it would limit whaling (apart from subsistence hunts) to the three countries currently doing it. 
Yet that may provoke dissent elsewhere. South Korea, for example, has regularly hinted that it would like equal treatment with Japan in any new arrangement. 
The IWC holds a special meeting in Florida in a couple of weeks’ time, at which this draft will be the principal item on the menu. Signs should emerge then as to how countries feel about it, prior to what will presumably be a final decision at the commission’s full annual meeting in June. 
That meeting, to be held in Morocco, will almost certainly be the end of the formal two-year “peace process”; it’ll either be endorsed or rejected. 
Delegates will be aware that rejection will set in stone the acrimony of the recent past; but whether there is enough here for them to endorse it is a hard call to make. 
SELECTED COMMENTS:
  • Manysummits: For what it’s worth, this process of politics and science and NGO’s sounds suspiciously like more of the same.
    The establishment will probably vote in favor of at least some agreement, no matter how watered down, believing, for very different reasons, that any agreement is better than none.
    I think I’ll go with my intuitive mind on this:
    Switch the onus to the Interacademy Panel on International Issues and the International Court.
    These preposterous committees such as the International Whaling Commission are exactly that, and pretending ‘it ain’t so’ isn’t washing with me anymore.
    There is more than a little of the rebel in me, I admit.
    For me the establishment is beginning to look not just like the ‘business as usual’ crowd, but is enlarging to include the safe and secure wherever they exist, whether in an academic institution or an NGO. 
  • I remember reading, a long time ago, about the then new “Law of the Sea”, and thinking how wonderful this was. I may have been a member of “The Cousteau Society” at the time?
    I am now much older – certainly more cynical, if not wiser.
    —————
    United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
    “… the UN has no direct operational role in the implementation of the Convention. There is, however, a role played by organizations such as the International Maritime Organization, the International Whaling Commission, and the International Seabed Authority (the latter being established by the UN Convention)…
    Although the United States helped shape the Convention and its subsequent revisions, and though it signed the 1994 Agreement on Implementation, it has not ratified the Convention.”
    ———-
    When are we going to wake up and smell the coffee?
    Let us clearly see and state what we should all by now know – that by and large, we the people have lost control, more or less completely, of any and all political process in the world today.
    Not so! I can hear the self-righteous cries.
    Let me say this as a mountaineer – I care little for words – actions count.
    Let me restate the words of your own foreign Secretary for the Royal Society, in charge of dealings with the Interacademy Panel on International Issues, which she considers the ‘United Nations’ of Science:
    The world now faces challenges on an unprecedented level, which we are unequivocally failing to address.” /// – Dr. Lorna Casselton
  • Peter Dewsnap: I would have no objection to those whalers being sunk.
  • Asterionella : I have no cristal ball, but my forecast: nothing will happen. Both sides will blame the other for the failure to reach an agreement. Too many whales will continue to die. 
  • davblo : Some good background reading maybe… Whaling controversy
  • b5happy : Really serves to illustrate (for me at least) what criminals are we… 
  • SamuelPickwick wrote: What is particularly irritating is the Japanese pretence that their whaling is “scientific”. But I can’t see them backing down, so I’m not anticipating any meaningful agreement. 
  • Femme : The basis for Japan´s quota as being for `scientific interest´ is blatantly false. The only scientific interest in whales is in the observation of living whales. Dead whales are for meat. There is no scientific interest in dead whales. Dead whales are for eating. So until Japan and other pro- whaling communities come clean on this issue we will continue to see these extraordinary mammals get hunted to the brink of extinction for meat. 
  • xtragrumpymike2 : We have a very interesting situation here in NZ at this minute (incidentally, NZ is “supposed” to be very “anti-whaling” but is taking zero action despite the situation with a NZ citizen)
    The various Ministers and other government MPs have been instructed to return to their respective constituencies to “indoctrinate” (my words) us, the general public, in the Government’s policy.
    I thought democracy was all about electing someone from the local community to represent US in Parliament.Not the other way round where “they” ram the policies of the Government down our throats” willy nilly. Just another nail in the coffin of Democracy. 
  • manysummits : I am wondering if it is not the industrial scale and method which is the problem.
    Factory ships killing whales is doubtless efficient in some modern sense, as is clearcutting a forest.
    But intuitively, I think this is not true efficiency, for it removes the human elememt, converting a genetically endowed hunter/gatherer into an industrial machine component.
    This idea is applicable at many scales in our current civilizations, and across a wide range of modern ways of making a living.
    The central tie, the heart of the fractal, is the de-humanizing of the human being – no matter the pursuit.
  • xtragrumpymike2 : Japan is hunting in what is supposed to be a Whale Sanctuary.
    The Ozzy and our Government are “supposed” to be supporting that “sanctuary” but are offering little in the way of criticism as they don’t want to upset the applecart (Free Trade Agreements and all that) so it’s left to the “Greenies” who can get pretty active at times. 
  • Malcolm : As a person from a strong anti whaling country – Australia, I am one of the vast majority who want end whaling in the southern ocean. Last year I spent the day at Hervey Bay in Queensland where from August to November the whales move north to breed. It was just a wonderful sight and something my partner and I talked about for weeks. It is amazing that many of these people, who go to Hervey Bay, are from Japan to see the whales . Which is ironic. 
  • xtragrumpymike2 : Pardon my flippancy here (I’m actually in total agreement, they come “whale Watching here too) those Japanese are probably thinking…….”Look at all those that got away!” 
  • hispeedlady : In the end it is down to each and every one of us. Your conscience, your choice. Eat less meat, write a letter, join an organization… or watch precious species disappear. YOU choose!
    I can’t pretend to be able to produce and juggle with numbers, but if we do nothing, our children and grandchildren will be asking why. And there will be no way back.
  • littlejean : I suppose the key point is being reasonable, but still, I believe we are hearing many stories of reasonable scaffolds collapsing, showing big companies’ inner lies in all their frightening glory. Astrophysicians say mass can bend light, I tend to believe that the same is true with money and truth.
    I Would like to add these japanese words of wisdom (or not ?), that are very popular in Japan : “it’s the nail that stands out that gets pounded down”.
    This might explain why the public opinion don’t dare to voice a thing against whaling.
  • bigeye : I have looked into the eye of a whale from 10 ft away. Anyone who kills these grand creatures of great intelligence is not a man . He is but a coward and will be stopped only when those who oppose them fight back by supporting action by Captain Paul Watson and Sea Sheperd. 
  • jr4412 : found this quote: “Greenpeace makes more money from anti-whaling than Norway and Iceland combined make from whaling” onhttp://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/editorial-061220-1.html, an interesting read.
  • Richard Black (BBC) : Regarding the issue of Japanese vs Icelandic and Norwegian whaling: one of the reasons why Japan commands so much attention from environmental campaigners is that it alone hunts in a declared whale sanctuary. Another is that it uses a factory ship to do so.
    Another important reason, though, is the political capital that Japan invests in the issue – in contrast to Norway, which does what it does quietly and unilaterally. You may find other reasons, of course.
    Articles about Icelandic hunts:
    Iceland plans big whalemeat trade
    Iceland sets major whaling quota
    Iceland minister warns on whaling

see also: http://www.ecop.info

Whales object to whaling compromise (enn)
A new draft compromise on whaling released by the International Whaling Commission (IWC) today set a dangerous precedent that the international community must reject, conservationists say.
A working group within the IWC today unveiled a new compromise aimed at unlocking the stalled negotiation process between countries fundamentally opposed to whaling and states that support it.
While the compromise contains many positive elements for whale conservation that would help bring the IWC into the 21st Century, the compromise could legitimise “scientific” whaling by Japan in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.
If there is one single place in the world where whales should be fully protected, it is the Southern Ocean. 
What we need is to eliminate all whaling in the Southern Ocean, including Japanese commercial whaling thinly disguised as ‘scientific research’. But what we have now is a deal which could make it even easier for Japan to continue taking whales in this ecologically unique place.
The IWC has maintained a ban on all commercial whaling since 1986. But, defying this ban, Japan, Norway and Iceland use loopholes in the IWC’s founding treaty to kill more than 1,500 whales a year. The loopholes allow whaling under ”objection” to management decisions (Norway and Iceland) and “scientific” whaling for research purposes (Japan).


————————— anti-piracy measures ———————————

Clipper brings blackmail charges against pirates (marinelog)
Clipper Project Ship Management A/S, a member of Denmark’s Clipper Group, has pressed charges against the Somali pirates, who hijacked the vessel CEC FUTURE on November 7, 2008 in the Gulf of Aden. Clipper Project brought the charges through the Special International Crimes Office in Denmark headed by the public prosecutor 
The CEC Future was on a voyage from Antwerp to Batam (Indonesia), when it was hijacked in the Gulf of Aden. The ship was released on January 16, 2009 after 71 days under the pirates’ control. The vessel was registered under the Bahamas flag and managed by Clipper Project Ship Management A/S in Denmark. The crew of 13 consisted of 11 Russians, an Estonian and a Georgian. Though quite common in the shipping industry, the range of flag, management and various crew nationalities schallenges the judicial system of the various nations involved with regard to governing law and prosecution of the pirates, should they be apprehended. 
In the case of the CEC Future, the pirates absconded with the ransom without being caught, and to date, no charges have been brought forward. 
On release of the crew and vessel, Clipper instructed the crew to collect all available evidence such as DNA material, pictures, letters and other relevant items. All of the evidence was handed over to U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) when the vessel arrived at Salalah, Oman. The NCIS also participated in debriefing the crew in order to support the general evidence collection and to improve its understanding of the pirates’ “modus operandi”. 
To Clipper’s knowledge the evidence from the hijacking of CEC Future has not yet been used to prosecute pirates. 
THE INITIATIVE 
Until now the piracy prosecution process has primarily been driven by the authorities only a passive participation byshipping companies and other relevant parties 
Clipper says it is now taking an active role by adding a new element to its anti-piracy effort. 
Although the vessel has a different flag and management, Clipper has now found a way to bring charges forward. 
It is acting through the Special International Crimes Office in Denmark which holds national responsibility for legal proceedings concerning serious international crimes. 
The principle behind the charge is a paragraph within the Danish Criminal Code which states that the Code can be enforced when the criminal act is effectively taken against a Danish company: in this case Clipper Project Ship Management A/S, based in Copenhagen. 
BLACKMAIL 
The core of the initiative by Clipper is to start criminal proceedings for blackmail, which is illegal under Danish law. Blackmail is committed both in the place where the blackmailer operates and in the place where the blackmailed company is situated. As Clipper Project Ship Management A/S is a Danish company based in Copenhagen, Danish criminal proceedings can therefore be initiated. 
Instead of initiating criminal charges for all aspects of a hijacking, Clipper’s approach focuses on that criminal activity by the pirates which undoubtedly can be dealt with by Danish authorities. Clipper says this approach of limiting the focus of thecase might also be open to ship owners in other cases. 
WAY AHEAD 
Clipper says its action in bringing a charge before the Danish authorities raises a number of questions. Who will apprehend the pirates? Where should the pirates be prosecuted? What will be the consequences of the charge? Clipper has already been in contact with the Danish chair of the legal Working Group of the Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia, who has confirmed that these issues will be taken up by the Working Group to the extent they are not already on the agenda in order for the Group to contribute to an international response to these key questions. 
Clipper is awaiting a response from the Danish authorities. It expects that they will take the matter very seriously and deal with the charge both speedily and in accordance with the relevant rules. 
“We also expect,” says Clipper,”that the Danish authorities share this information with their colleagues in other States e.g. through INTERPOL.” 
Clipper is encouraging other companies that have been affected by a piracy incident to investigate whether their national laws provide a similar opportunity to bring charges against the pirates as well. Clipper firmly believes that, at a minimum, the effort will bring all of the implied challenges to the attention of the relevant governments and authorities. 
WORKING GROUP 
Clipper says that the Contact Group on Piracy off the coast of Somalia, named Working group 2, or WG 2, is doing an impressive job of establishing the legal requirements to support the prosecution of pirates, but there remain major challenges. 
CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS 
Presently more than 100 pirates are awaiting trial in Kenya and other countries but challenges to be overcome include:

collection of valid evidence 
sharing of evidence to support court cases 
witness contribution during court process 
financing court systems 
national laws vs. international law

Typically, a wealth of evidence is collected, both during the capture of a vessel and after its release. Examples include: 
DNA evidence, debriefing and interview of the crew (some times in the presence of Naval Intelligence) and photos of the pirates 
The majority of shipowners have provided such evidence after the vessels have been released. However, the question still remains: How is the evidence used? And, is it shared to the benefit of all involved? 
Clipper says evidence provided by shipowners should be available to all involved authorities to support the prosecution process. It seems that evidence collected by the shipowners and vessels is not being disseminated, but to the contrary, it is being used only by the service to which it has been offered. This could be rectified by establishing a shared evidence database. To Clipper’s knowledge the evidence collected from CEC Future after release, which was provided to the U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Services (NCIS), has not been shared at all. 
A major obstacle to evidence sharing is the lack of an agency that both coordinates the use of evidence and drives the prosecution process; a single point of access for a ship owner. The interface is lacking which results in evidence gathering and prosecution being handled on a Ònarrow basisÓ without required coordination to support the work.. Clipper suggests that a possible way to strengthen the entire process would be to utilize an existing organization that already holds a part of the process and possesses the required knowledge. The initiative by INTERPOL to establish a dedicated task force to coordinate the international response to the maritime piracy threat in all its facets is highly appreciated. INTERPOL already holds a part of the process, and thus, says Clipper, is an obvious choice to expand the mandate to handle a wider range of tasks. 
Clipper says that resources need to be allocated to support the prosecution and imprisonment of the pirates and thinks the United Nations “seems to be the natural organization to coordinate such work.”

Somalia: Piracy Redux by Francis Njubi Nesbitt (*)  (TowardFreedom)
Over a year after the scourge of piracy escalated in the Gulf of Aden, the world is still mired in misguided and misdirected militarist policies. Meanwhile, millions of Somalis are caught in desperate circumstances. One-third of the country is on the run. Thousands choose to make the horrendous trek to Kenya where they face relatively safe, yet empty lives in refugee camps. At the African Union summit last month, diplomats lamented that even though Somalia was a major security threat, it didn’t get anywhere near the attention that Afghanistan received.
 
The world’s response has been to mobilize an awesome armada in the Gulf of Aden. This strategy has been pathetically ineffective. During the one-year anniversary of the formation of the 50-nation Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia in New York on January 14, 2010, the taskforce had little to report. There were extensive discussions about the size of the coalition and its firepower, but nothing about actual successes in suppressing piracy. Instead, members of the naval taskforce agreed that piracy attacks have increased since last year.
According to the International Maritime Organization, piracy incidents increased sharply in 2009 and 2010. In January 2009, the ransom for the Saudi tanker Sirius Star was $3 million. The next month, the ransom for the Ukrainian-flagged MV Fania rose to $3.2 million. By December 2009, the ransom for the Kota Wajar was up to $4 million. And in January 2010, the ransom for the Greek-flagged oil tanker Maran Centaurus hit $7 million. Every time there is a report of a large settlement, the next ransom goes up.
Gaining Ground
The pirates are gaining ground, both literally and figuratively. They know that hijacking ships carries minimal risk and huge potential rewards. Pirates are ranging farther out into the Indian Ocean, and building wealth and political influence on land. Pirates are displacing traditional leaders because they have money and money is influence.
This should be much more disturbing for the international community, but leaders and media continue to be fascinated by the seaborne piracy phenomenon. Hollywood, for instance, is planning a slew of movies on piracy in the Gulf of Aden. This is a nightmare for policymakers. The pirates in their little fiberglass skiffs make gigantic aircraft carriers look like helpless giants. What is a problem for the navies is a boon for local fishermen. Reports indicate that fish stocks in neighboring Kenya have increased exponentially since the rise of piracy stopped the looting of fish stocks by European and Asian trawlers.
The pirates on- and offshore are well aware of the power of media. They have spin-doctors and plants in media organizations such as Al Jazeera and the BBC. They are loaded with high-tech gadgets such as GPS devices, cell phones, and satellite phones.  They have negotiators, lawyers, risk analysts, and consultants based in London, Nairobi and Dubai.
The Somali Mess
Furthermore, Somalia has become a free-trade zone because of lack of government control over the economy. The main battles are for the control of the ports and airports. Warlords in control of airports and ports are taking advantage of the lack of government control to make billions from smugglers. Millions of tons of commodities such as food, electronics, arms, and other contraband are transported on the high seas marked “Somalia,” but are actually headed to countries such as Kenya, Sudan, Ethiopia and Djibouti.
Mogadishu has become the main source of illegal arms in the region. Businesses, nation states, the Somali diaspora, and local clan militia all contribute to the growth of the illegal arms trade.
As a result, some stakeholders in the region may be invested in the perpetuation of the conflict. It’s not only the pirates making a killing.
Role of Diaspora
An important and often overlooked factor in the conflict is the role of the large Somali diaspora in East Africa, the Middle East, Europe, Canada and the United States. This diaspora is composed of the most educated Somalis. Some in the diaspora have contributed to peacemaking in Somaliland and Puntland, but many are playing a negative role by funding warring clan leaders and warlords. Some run incredibly lucrative smuggling operations and money transfer agencies based in Nairobi, Dubai, and Aden. The UNDP estimates that Somalis in the diaspora contribute about $1 billion in remittances annually. These funds are distributed through money-transfer agencies controlled by clan leaders and warlords who tax the remittances. Thus the funds go primarily to family members, but also to finance clan leaders and warlords. Considering the profits, some of the more successful diaspora entrepreneurs may not want a stable Somalia because it would be bad for business.
Although it seems the United States, China, the European Union, and other powerful nations have tried to suppress piracy in the Gulf of Aden they hesitate to take the initiative on land. U.S. and EU forces have joined with the regional initiative to train and equip the Transitional Federal Government (TFG). Kenya, Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Uganda have all agreed to train military and police officers for the TFG. The United States led the way in financing this effort, but there needs to be a more aggressive response in all the spheres of defense, diplomacy, and development. Efforts to support the TFG are commendable, but need to be enhanced. The African Union peacekeeping force, for instance, continues to be underfunded and undermanned. Although countries in the region are willing to send troops, they’re unable to finance the force. In the final analysis, however, it is support for development projects that will reduce the violence by restoring hope and bringing jobs, health, and human dignity to the people of Somalia.
The international community should shore up legitimate traditional leaders who are losing ground to new upstarts backed by criminal enterprises such as piracy and smuggling. Leaders of the al-Shabaab militias are also pushing aside the traditional leaders and force-feeding Somalis a stricter foreign version of Islam that is very different from the traditional Sufi belief system. Without support, these potential allies in the traditional leadership will seek alternative sources of economic and physical security for their clansmen. These local leaders are under siege, but they still retain some legitimacy. This won’t last, however, unless they can deliver the basic needs. This means delivering food, health care, and security through the traditional channels.
After 20 years of chaos, the local Somali people are desperate for peace and security. Is the international community ready to step up to the challenge.


Dar to probe radar scandal despite $46m payout by Abduel Elinanza (TheEastAfrican)
Andrew Chenge resigned as Minister for Infrastructure Development after SFO implicated him in the scandal.
Tanzania is at a crossroads.

It is wondering whether to investigate an international corruption case involving British arms manufacturers BAE systems.
This is after the company admitted it was guilty of dubious financial dealings in its sale of a $46 million Watchman Air Traffic Control System to Tanzania.
BAE Systems admitted there were malpractices in the process, and offered to refund the Government of Tanzania $46 million.
Chairman Dick Olver said in an interview: “Under the agreement with the Serious Fraud Office, the company will plead guilty to one charge of breach of duty to keep accounting records in relation to payments made to a former marketing adviser in Tanzania.
“The company will pay an agreed penalty of £30m ($46m), comprising a fine to be determined by the court, and the balance as a charitable payment for the benefit of Tanzania.”
In Tanzania, senior officials of the Prevention and Combating of Corruption Bureau (PCCB) and the Ministry of Justice were tight-lipped on whether to continue with investigations.
Last week, UK’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) allowed BAE to plead guilty to the offence of selling to Tanzania a £28 million air traffic control system, yet requesting $46 million in payment.
The SFO then dropped its charges against those involved in the scandal, who included Tanzanian officials Andrew Chenge (the then Attorney General), tycoon Tanil K.C Somaiya of Shivacom and Shailesh P. Vithilan.
In court, they were accused number six, eight and nine, respectively.
Accused number seven is not mentioned on the charge sheet.
Mr Chenge was later appointed a Minister for Infrastructure Development in the Kikwete administration.
He resigned after SFO implicated him in the scandal, with claims that he received $1.5 million from BAE.
The World Bank and the International Civil Aviation Organisation — before and after the purchase of the system — said it was unnecessarily overpriced.
The PCCB investigation was, however, largely dependent on SFO findings, meaning the country will have to conduct its own probe.

This viewpoint is supported by the Deputy Leader of the official opposition in the National Assembly, Dr Wilbrod Slaa.
The SFO has been investigating the $39.5m (Tsh53 billion) contract signed in 1999 to supply a radar system to Tanzania.
The probe relates to payments of $12 million to Shailesh Vithlani, BAE’s former marketing adviser in Dar es Salaam.
A six-year investigation by SFO identified key roles played in the radar deal by Mr Chenge and Dr Idris Rashidi, the then Bank of Tanzania governor.
PCCB public relations officer Doreen Kapwani told The EastAfrican that they were yet to issue a statement on the matter.
“There is a bureau event soon, you may get your answers then; after all, the director (Dr Edward Hosea) is at a meeting,” she said.
The Minister for Justice, Mathias Chikawe, declined to comment on the matter.
By pleading guilty under section 221 of the Companies Act, 1985, BAE will not face an embarrassing court case.


————– no real peace in sight yet —————–

More int’l support needed to solve Somalia’s crisis: president (Xinhua)
More supports from the international community for Somalia’s transitional government were needed to solve the country’s prolonged and complicated crisis, Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed said on Sunday in an exclusive interview with Xinhua.

“The international community gives us (the transitional government) many support, but is not as much as we expect. But still we are thankful, and (the support is) helpful to us,” Ahmed said. 
The president said he took office at the hardest time for Somalia, and since then his administration has been exerting continuous efforts to push for reconciliation of the country’s warring sides. 
“To make Somalia peaceful is a big responsibility and we have taken a number of tasks in talking and communicating to them (the warring sides) the importance of peace and to take part in peace,” Ahmed said. 
However, as time goes by, the situation in the Horn of Africa country has become far more complicated than could be expected, he said. 
“When the central government of the Republic of Somalia lost in the 1990s, different ideology came to grow and created problems in Somalia,” said the president. 
Somalia has been plagued by civil strife since the overthrow of military strongman Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. The nation of about 8 million people has had no effective government for almost two decades. 
Ahmed, a moderate Islamist, was elected president of the transitional government in January 2009 by the expanded Somali parliament following UN-brokered peace talks. 
Islamist insurgent groups, which now control almost the entire south and central Somalia except for a small part of the restive capital Mogadishu, have been mounting deadly attacks against forces of the transitional government and the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), causing heavy casualty in troops and civilians. 
The fragile government faced the deadliest single suicide attack on its rank on Dec. 3 last year, when three senior ministers and dozens of civilians were killed in a suicide bomb explosion that struck a graduation ceremony at a hotel in a government-controlled area in southern Mogadishu. 
Earlier this month, State Minister Yusuf Mohamed Siyad Indha Adde survived a suicide car bomb attack, in which at least five people were killed and more than 14 others, including two of Adde’s bodyguards, were wounded, also in the government-controlled area in the capital city. 
Meanwhile, the piracy problem in Somalia, partly resulting from the country’s anarchy, was also a big headache for the government, the president said. 
“Piracy is a major problem we are facing because they can earn money from those ships, because they can use it for unlawful activities that create problems…” said Ahmed. 
Somalia is going through a difficult time, Ahmed said. A strong government could not be established without strong and effective support from the international community, he added. 
“We are still young. We need more help to grow up soon,” said the president.

Thorn of Africa
Mogadishu is a shattered city, but fragments of its old beauty remain, says Tristan McConnell (newstatesman) 
After dark, the dull thud of mortars and the staccato popping of machine guns come more frequently. Sometimes the explosions make it hard to sleep, so I lie awake counting, learning to read the Mogadishu soundscape: one . . . two-three . . . four. Pauses follow sequences of explosions like Morse code, each bullet and mortar landing somewhere, ending or ruining a life.
The fighting is sporadic, but suffering and death strike frequently and at random. At an outpatient clinic one Monday afternoon in January, an 82mm mortar hits the queue waiting outside. Seven-year-old Muhammad is on his way to see his mother, a cleaner at the clinic, when the exploding mortar peppers his left side with shrapnel. Six other people are blown to pieces. In hospital hours later, the geometric white patches scattered across the curves and shades of an X-ray show where the shards have embedded themselves in Muhammad’s body.
The current round of fighting is just the latest in Somalia’s decades-old war. Al-Shabaab, an Islamist militia that recently confirmed its allegiance to al-Qaeda, is battling the Transitional Federal Government for control of the country. The TFG gets diplomatic support and money from the UN, soldiers from the African Union and military hardware from the US; take any one of these away and it would collapse like every other administration in the past 19 years. In 1991, the country’s last functioning government – itself a venal dictatorship – was defeated by an alliance of clan militias. The warlords then turned on each other, fighting for economic and political control. Somalia has been a maelstrom of violence ever since.
There have been moments of respite. In 2006, the militias were defeated by the Islamic Courts Union – a political group of which al-Shabaab was the armed wing. But within months the union had been chased from power by a US-backed Ethiopian invasion.Now, al-Shabaab is back – stronger and more radical – and holds sway over much of Somalia. Mogadishu is a city of ruins, bearing testimony to the years of destruction. Roads are broken; buildings are shattered, concertinaed to the ground or lacking outer walls, like giant honeycombs. Battered minibus taxis move aside for armoured personnel carriers and “technicals”: home-made Somali battle wagons constructed by welding machine guns on to pickup trucks. In street battles, gunmen use these to blast the hell out of each other and anyone in between.
But here and there are echoes of a lost grandeur. Down by the sea, there is an old city quarter of once-paved piazzas lined with roofless porticos, crumbling façades and ornate cracked archways. Dust devils twist down sun-bleached streets past groups of men drinking sweet tea. They wear loose short-sleeved shirts and macawis - printed cotton sarongs. Some cradle AK-47s in their laps. Women in niqabs hurry by, robes flapping in the wind.
At a crossroads known as K4, beneath a clear blue sky, a dozen or so soldiers sweat. They are members of the 5,300-strong Ugandan and Burundian peacekeeping force deployed by the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM). K4 is on a major route between the port and the airport, and the soldiers face almost constant fire from the nearby Bakara Market, an al-Shabaab stronghold.
Sometimes they fire back with mortars. They say they try to limit “collateral damage”, but Bakara is a densely populated neighbourhood and a mortar is an indiscri minate weapon. Bullets smack into concrete walls overhead or thud into the sandbags piled high around the rooftop of the old Egyptian embassy building where the peacekeepers are stationed. “Since morning we have been under attack from sniper fire,” says the detachment’s Ugandan commander.
A few days later, on 29 January, President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed is due to celebrate one year in power. At two that morning, al-Shabaab attacks, firing the first shots at K4. Tank fire reverberates around the city; the fighting that 
follows is the heaviest Mogadishu has suffered in months.
Under fire
By late morning gunshots are still ringing out; but at Villa Somalia, the president’s hilltop palace, government supporters are determined to have their anniversary party. Ahmed, a diminutive figure at the best of times, sits lost in the puffy folds of an outsized leather armchair, watching a wobbly documentary of his achievements projected on to a white wall.
He barely blinks when the first mortar hits a checkpoint on the edge of the sprawling palace grounds, killing one and wounding at least three. The second mortar is closer, landing just metres from the hall where hundreds are gathered to hear poets and choirs sing the president’s praises. Panic starts to spread as dust and smoke leak through the latticework walls of the building. Then tanks fire back in the direction of the attack and there are no more mortars. The crowd resettles and the performers continue.
Assaults on “safe” parts of Mogadishu – Villa Somalia or the AMISOM headquarters, struck by suicide bombers last September – underline the weakness of the government’s grip on even the few parts of the city it claims to control. With neither the TFG nor its enemies strong enough to inflict an outright defeat on the other, the city has fallen into a deadly impasse. A much-discussed government/AMISOM offensive against al-Shabaab may break the deadlock. But fighting has never yet brought peace to the residents of Mogadishu.

Somali presidential residence featured by gunshots, security threats (Xinhua)
Security threats with sporadic gunshots marked the residence of Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed on Sunday, testifying the tension in the capital of the Horn of Africa country.
Carrying heavy helmets and thick bulletproof jackets, Xinhua correspondents entered the presidential residence under the intensive protection of over 20 armed soldiers and with three armed vehicles leading the way. They gained an opportunity to make an exclusive interview with the president.
The residence is located on a small hill in downtown Mogadishu, overlooking the whole capital. The residence of the prime minister, the offices of ministers and other important leaders gathered all within the presidential residence of about 1 square km.
“It will be easy for a meeting,” a public information officer did not forget to crack a joke.
All equipments of journalists, even a pen, have been under strict screening by five armed soldiers in front of the entry. “This is in Mogadishu, I think you can understand,” the official told Xinhua.
Somalia has been plagued by civil strife since the overthrow of military strongman Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. Islamist insurgent groups, which now control almost the entire south and central Somalia except for a small part of the restive capital Mogadishu, have been mounting deadly attacks against forces of the transitional government and the African Union Mission in Somalia, causing heavy casualty in troops and civilians.
Earlier this month, State Minister Yusuf Mohamed Siyad Indha Adde survived a suicide car bomb attack, in which at least five people were killed and more than 14 others, including two of Adde’s bodyguards, were wounded, also in the government-controlled area in the capital city.
The presidential residence was not a peace oasis either. Sporadic or intensive gunshots erupted alternatively around the area, making everyone remain on alarm all the time.
One of the gunshots was fired less than 20 meters from the residence. The official of the residence explained it must be someone suspected who crossed the cordon with arms. “It is quite normal. The insurgents often try to rush into the presidential residence. We, therefore, are always ready to fight them,” he said.
President Ahmed accepted the interview under the background of such gunshots in a room of the residence. His peaceful look and composedness impressed the correspondents.
“To make Somalia peaceful is a big responsibility and we have taken a number of tasks in talking and communicating to them (the warring sides) the importance of peace and to take part in peace,” Ahmed said.
However, as time goes by, the situation in the Horn of Africa country has become far more complicated than could be expected, he said.

Explosion rocks Mogadishu location under Al Shabaab control (garoweonline)
At least six people, including three Al-Shabaab fighters have been killed in an explosion and targeted assassinations in the restive capital Mogadishu, officials and witnesses said on Monday.
The explosion rocked an intersection called Bar-Ubax located near Al-Shabaab-held Bakara Market, killing three people who are said to be the ones usually planting the landmines. 
The explosions were powerful which was caused by two landmines. We don’t know the people behind it because the area is controlled by anti-government forces,” said a resident who requested not to be identified.
However, confidential reports claim that fighters from Hizbul Islam militant group, Al-Shabaab’s arch rivals were behind the explosions. Al-Shabaab officials say the explosions were targeted on the group’s top officials, who reside from the area.
“We will officially talk about the explosions once we finish the investigations. At the moment, we can’t blame anyone,” said an Al-Shabaab official who spoke with reporters.
Meanwhile, three Al-Shabaab fighters were also killed inside Bakara Market by unknown assassins. According to eyewitnesses, the bodies of the three with gunshot wounds on the heads were found abandoned in the area.
The two groups were once engaged in a joint war against the UN-backed government but broke ranks after fighting over southern Somali regions, leading to unofficial brutal internal strife targets top officials from both sides.
 

Two girls kidnapped from Puntland, Sri Lankan arrested (Somalilandpress)
A Sri Lankan native was detained for questioning after he was caught attempting to smuggle a 13 year old girl from Puntland, Haatuf reports. 
Asha Mohamed Hassan, 13, from Qardho in the semi-autonomous region of Puntland, went to her usual work on Friday 5th of February in one of the local beauty salons where girls occasionally get their hands and feet decorated with henna. On that same day, an Italian woman, also a regular client, whose mother is said to be Somali came to the salon. 
Asha told Haatuf, the Italian woman lured her with the promise of a job in Hargeisa that was paying $600 per month. She was told she will be working for a family as a housemaid, doing basic household chores. 
“The Italian woman, who I met before asked if I wanted to work in Hargeisa, I told her, I tried before to go to Hargeisa to find a job but did not work out for me. However I told her if she would pay for my journey I was ready to go,” she said.
After getting her clothes, Asha was forced into the boot of a car to avoid being seen by her sisters who run their own stalls in one of the central markets. 
“She then asked me to get my belongings and be ready, there was a car leaving for Hargeisa tomorrow. After getting all my belongings she took me to a house in the out skirts of the city where she lived, a moment later a Mark II car approached us and she told the driver to hide me in the boot from my sisters and the guards at the check-points,” she told Haatuf. 
Once they left the town of Qardho, Asha said, she was moved to the front seat of the car and crossed the border after few hours. 
While traveling through the city of Buaro, Somaliland’s second largest town, the driver was contacted by a man who stated that the girl was to be delivered to him. 
Once they arrived in Hargeisa, Asha claims, she was delivered to a ‘white man with damaged skin’. The man is actually a Sri Lankan who suffers from leprosy, a chronic skin disease. She added she was in a state of shock, disbelieve and distressed as she thought she would be working for a family not a man. 
“I told him, I don’t know you and I will not go with you, he then requested I speak to my sister referring to the Italian woman,” she said. 
The driver took the girl to one of his relatives in Hargeisa where she is currently staying. Later she find out that the Sri Lankan man was detained by the police and is said to be in prison. 
Asha has since contacted her family and his in good spirit. 
In a press conference in Hargeisa today, Somaliland police Chief, Col. Mohamed Shiil Dibar said they have detained a Sri Lankan man of Russian origin. He said, the man wanted to take the girl to Russia. He warned Somaliland parents to be alert and at all times monitor their children. 
No one knows if the driver will face any charges and Puntland has not commented either and no one knows if the Italian woman in the centre of the trafficking is detained. 
In a similar incident, a young girl is currently held in Burao by the regional authority after she was kidnapped by an Oromo lady (ethnic group in Ethiopia) and sold her to two Ethiopian men. 
Halima Osman Bile, the mother, said her daughter went missing midday in the town of Bandar Bayla in Puntland, near the northern tip of Somalia, where pirate base Eyl is more popular. 
The little girl was taken to Puntland’s commercial town of Bosaaso before she was smuggled into Somaliland. 
She is currently held in Burao by the local authority as police investigate the matter. The case is still under review. 
No one knows the number of children trafficked, kidnapped or smuggle each year between Somaliland and Somalia but there has been a sharp increase in recent years due to the lack of border patrols and influx of immigrants. Child smuggling was unheard of in Somaliland and Puntland but in recent years there have been an influx of immigrants displaced in Ethiopia and Southern Somalia, where kidnapping children is more common. 
It was not long ago, when a lady from Southern Somalia also kidnapped a two year old child from the town of Las Anod before her family informed the police. 
In early February of this year, Somaliland’s minister of Family Affairs and Social Development, Ms. Fatima Sudi voiced her concern about the new problem of human trafficking. 
“This is something new to us but widely known in the war torn places. It is called human trafficking,” she said. 
Ms. Sudi said her Ministry has been working hard in finding a viable solution to the issue and dealing with the tremendous immigration problem. 
“We thank [the] UN & NGOs, who had assisted us with the problem of human trafficking. We extend special thanks to the government of Japan, who funded IOM to assist us on these matters,” the minister said. 
“There are people who are experts on carrying out human trafficking activities. They lure people, they tell them that there are better places with better life, but at the end those innocent lives will be exploited.” 
Ms. Sudi said they will be launching massive awareness campaign and very soon huge billboards will go up in the regions of Awdal, Hargeisa, Sahil, Togdheer and Baligubadle. 
According to an analyst, most of the trafficking involve immigrants or foreigners in the country.
 

Somaliland President Farole returns from trip abroad (garoweonline)
The president of Somalia’s Puntland state Dr. Abdirahman Mohammed Farole has returned to the administrative capital of Garowe from long trip to some foreign countries. 
The president, accompanied by Puntland’s Minister for Internal Affairs Gen. Abdullahi Ahmed Jama ‘Ilkajir’, was welcomed at the airport by Vice President Abdisamad Ali Shire. 
President Farole thanked all who welcomed him back, commending the work of the security forces, which ensured the safety measures.
According to reliable reports, the president is expected to attend to many issues including the security, which the key to the development. 
In his four-week foreign tour, Puntland’s leader visited Djibouti, Libya, Ethiopia and United Arab Emirates where he fronted the Puntland agendas.

Puntland authority says it has foiled explosion attacks (Somaliweyn)
The administration of the semiautonomous state of Puntland in Mudug region has said that it has thwarted series of explosions which were aimed to be attacked at the officials of Puntland state. 
“There was a landmine which was buried just behind the compound of the division police station, and the objective was to attack the officials of Puntland who frequently use the street which the device was buried, and know we have succeeded to unearth it and there were several other similar cases which we have foiled” said Muse Ahmed Abdurrahman the provincial police commissioner of Mudug region speaking to Somaliweyn Website.    
The police commissioner has as well wholeheartedly thanked the inhabitants of Mudug region who closely work with Puntland authority in the side of alerting if they sight anything which is out the ordinary. 
Since Puntland state has declared its self-governing state in the year 1998 it was one of the most peaceful regions in Somalia, but in the recent years it has become a horrific place, after prominent figures in the authority of Puntland were assassinated as high as Ministers and some killed in explosion buried in the ground. 
When explosions and assassinations have become routine in Puntland the authority has sieved Digil and Mirifle communities from its regional of authority, but yet the explosions have been going on as usual.

Somalia urges Ethiopia to free detained officials (PressTV)
Mogadishu has urged Ethiopia to release several Somali nationals, who officials say have been in Ethiopian police custody after fleeing violence in the strife-torn country. 
Somali authorities said Monday that two lawmakers and several military officials have been in Ethiopian police custody for two weeks. 
They have told Press TV that the detainees were on a government mission near the border and were forced to enter Ethiopia after their convoy came under attack by armed Somali fighters. 
Somalia’s internationally-backed government, which assumed office in 2009 with the hopes of bringing some semblance of stability to the lawless Horn of Africa nation, has been under attack by Somali fighters from the start. 
The fighters have vowed to bring down the government of Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed. 
Violence has killed more than 21,000 people in Somalia since the beginning of 2007.

Rift emerges in Somali Sufi group by Ali Musa Abdi (AFP)
Senior leaders from Somalia’s main Sufi group Ahlu Sunna wal Jamaa on Tuesday denounced a deal struck last week by some of its members with the government during a meeting in Addis Ababa.

The Ethiopian foreign ministry had issued a statement on Saturday announcing an agreement between the embattled internationally-backed transitional federal government and the Sufi group to combat the country’s Islamist insurgency.
But some of the Sufi movement’s top figures argued that those who reached the deal in Addis were not representative of the group and not authorised to set policy.
“The so-called agreement reached and discussions that took place in Addis Ababa were misleading and created a rift within Ahlu Sunna followers,” Sheikh Omar Sheikh Mohamed Farah, a top Ahlu Sunna leader, told AFP in Mogadishu.
He argued that “the Addis deal does the Shebab and other anti-peace groups a favour by promoting some individuals over others and undermining a planned Ahlu Sunna general assembly to be held soon.”
Abdulkadir Mohamed Somow, another leader, said that one faction with Ahlu Sunna had “hijacked the process” by dealing directly with the federal government in the organisation’s name.
He suggested the government was deliberately trying to sow division.
“The Somali government should take Ahlu Sunna seriously and make no unilateral deal with some members who are not elected leaders, disregarding the vast majority,” he said.
Ahlu Sunna wal Jamaa took up arms in 2008 to counter the growing threat to its traditional brand of Sufi Islam posed by the Shebab, a self-declared component of Al-Qaeda’s global jihad.
While inexperienced and poorly trained, the ad hoc Sufi militia is seen by observers as an important component of a planned government-led offensive to root out the Shebab, who currently control 80 percent of the country.
The Sufi group has wide popular support is well established in the Galgudud and Mudug regions of central Somalia but some key federal government members remain deeply suspicious and see them chiefly as political rivals.
Recent reports allege that Ahlu Sunna has sought to secure the post of prime minister in President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed’s administration in exchange for help in the milittary effort against the insurgents.
Sheikh Mohamed Deeq, a senior figure in Ahlu Sunna, said it was too early to discuss power-sharing and that all should unite in the effort to wrest control of the country back from hardliners.
“The Addis meeting has simply undermined the fight against extremism,” he said. “We should not wrangle over power issues until after we liberate Somalis from the Shebab and Hezb al-Islam Al Qaeda agents.”
“The Somali government should beware of self-appointed Ahlu Sunna representatives who risk shattering our unity,” he said.
For weeks, civilians in Mogadishu and elsewhere have been fleeing their homes in anticipation of the major government offensive.
 

More deadly clashes in central Somalia (PressTV)
At least five people were killed on Sunday when fighters with Somalia’s powerful militant movement clashed with a government-allied militia in villages in central Somalia. 
The clashes erupted after Al-Shabaab fighters attacked government positions in the villages of Ris and Ago’ade, located near the group’s largest military base in Elbur town, a Press TV correspondent reported. 
The dead include several combatants from each side. 
Villagers caught in the crossfire fled to other areas. 
Hundreds of government forces were reportedly deployed in the area ahead of the planned offensives against the Al-Shabaab fighters, who control much of the region.


Al-Shabab arrests a journalist in the lower Shabelle region in Somalia (shabelle)
Al-Shabab an armed Islamist faction in Somalia which administers most of the regions in southern Somalia and partly of central Somalia has arrested Ali Yussuf Adan Radio Somaliweyn correspondent at the town of Wanlaweyn district in the lower Shabelle region in southern Somalia. 
The officials of Al-Shabab in the town have not yet said the reason as to why the journalist was arrested.
And the latest report which somaliweyn Website has received from the town of Wanlaweyn says that the journalist is transferred to Marka town the headquarters of the lower Shabelle region. 
“In fact I don’t know why my colleague was detained, but I think he is arrested because of his reports which are always based on the fact, Ali has ever been impartial journalist who used to be unbiased and reports the matter on the fact as it is” said another journalist in Wanlaweyn speaking to Somaliweyn Website in condition of anonymity.   
The arrest of the journalist was simultaneously condemned by the other Somali journalists who are serving in the country and the human rights activists organizations in the country particularly those in the capital Mogadishu.    
Al-Shabab has earlier shutdown number of radio stations in the country such as Warsan, Jubbah in Baidoa region and Mandeeq in Bula-Hawo district in Gedo region. 
Somalia is one of the most dangerous places in the world were a journalist can work and this incident coincides at a time Amanda Lindhout a Canadian freelance journalist has for the first time addressed a crowed of people since her release by Somali kidnappers who have been holding her captive for more than 1 year.
 

Groups Condemn Detention of Somali Journalist by Alan Boswell (VOA)
Global media rights groups are condemning the arrest and detention of a Somali radio reporter by the al-Shabab rebels.  Somalia is considered one of the most dangerous places in the world to work as a journalist.  
The National Union of Somali Journalists reports the Islamist militant group al-Shabab has imprisoned Ali Yusuf Adan, a radio correspondent for the private media broadcaster Somaliweyn. 
International watchdog groups are decrying the abduction, which they say is part of a troubling trend in areas under the control of the al-Qaida-linked Somali rebels. 
Gabriel Baglo, head of the Africa program for Brussels-based International Federation of Journalists, called for Adan’s immediate release.  He said the situation for journalists in Somalia right now is the most pressing on the continent. 
“Somalia, in Africa presently, is the big concern.  Every day we receive reports of threats from the al-Shabab group, calling journalists and threatening them not to report anything that would be critical to them or anything that they think that is not in agreement with their religious view,” he said.
It is not known why Adan has been detained by the militants, but it is suspected to be related to a report he gave before his arrest Sunday in which he described the killing of a man by al-Shabab for being tardy to a mandatory prayer session.  Al-Shabab has implemented a strict interpretation of religious sharia law in areas under its control. 
Nine journalists were killed in Somalia last year, and many more were injured or forced to flee amid constant harassment. 
But Baglo says that, although their numbers are dwindling, there remain a number of remarkably brave professionals who continue to do an admirable job under extremely harsh conditions. 
“It is really difficult to practice independent journalism in Somalia presently,” he added.  “But we still have very courageous journalists who continue to do this work, and we need to really commend them and support them.”
A report from U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) warned the flow of journalists forced to go into foreign exile, along with the forced censorship of much of the local media under rebel control, is severely lowering the quality of Somali news that reaches the outside world. 
The CPJ also reported that journalists with English-language skills were disproportionately likely to face intimidation or attacks in the Horn of Africa nation. 
Al-Shabab, which espouses an arch-conservative form of Islam, is waging an intense insurgency against the Western-backed Mogadishu Transitional Federal Government.  The Islamist rebels control much of the capital and most of southern Somalia.
The Transitional Federal Government, which is headed by former Islamist rebel Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, is propped up by an African Union peacekeeping force composed of Ugandan and Burundian soldiers.


Journalist captured by al-Shabab must be released (ai – press release) 
Amnesty International is calling for the immediate release of a Somali radio journalist held by the armed group al-Shabab, apparently after a report was broadcast alleging the group had killed a man in the Wanleweyn district. 
Ali Yusuf Adan, a 47 year old correspondent for Radio Somaliweyn, is being held by the armed group in the port city of Merka, in southern Somalia.

“Amnesty International fears for the safety of Ali Yusuf Adan, given the numerous human rights abuses committed by al-Shabab against civilians, including journalists”, said Erwin van der Borght, Africa Director at Amnesty International. 
“Al-Shabab must immediately release him without harm, stop threatening journalists and respect the right of all Somalis to freedom of expression.” 
Ali Yusuf Adan was captured on 21 February in Wanleweyn, a town north-west of the capital Mogadishu controlled by the armed group, 
Al-Shabab has said that the journalist was held because he made a “mistake”. 
In the past few months the group has imposed drastic restrictions on journalists in an attempt to stifle information in areas they control. 
They have closed down radio stations, banned the airing of reports mentioning Somalia’s government and made intimidating statements against journalists.
Many journalists who fled Somalia reported to Amnesty International that they did so after receiving death threats from individuals claiming to be members of al-Shabab. 
Nine journalists were killed in 2009 in Somalia; at least three of them were deliberately murdered. 
Two radio directors, Said Tahlil Ahmed and Mukhtar Hirabe, were killed in Bakara market last year, an area of Mogadishu controlled by al-Shabab militia. 
Although al-Shabab spokespeople have denied involvement in these killings, the group’s leaders have failed to publicly condemn attacks against the media and order their forces not to target journalists.
 

The Terror of al Shabaab by Chris Harnisch (*) (TheDailyStandard

The United Nations has recently ratcheted up its criticism of the United States’ decision to withhold humanitarian aid to parts of Somalia controlled by the Islamist terror group al Shabaab.  The international body’s official in charge of aid distribution in Somalia accused the U.S. of preventing the distribution of tens of millions of dollars in aid to a desperate and starving population.  Any decision regarding the limiting of humanitarian aid to a country in need can be terribly difficult, especially for a country such as Somalia, which has seen 85,000 people displaced in 2010 alone and is described by the World Bank as “one of the poorest countries in the world.”  But the United States’ decision to withhold aid to terrorist-controlled parts to the country is the right decision for the people of Somalia and, more importantly, the security of the United States. 
Somalia has been without an effective government since the overthrow of the despot Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. The international community has made many attempts to prop up transitional and reconciliation governments over the past two decades, but the country has inevitably continued to fall to the control of various tribal warlords and Islamist groups.  Today, the control of the UN-backed Transitional Federal Government (TFG) is limited to a few strategic points inside the capital, Mogadishu, whereas a group resembling a hybrid of the Taliban and al Qaeda called al Shabaab governs most of the country’s south. 
The Islamic provincial administrations of al Shabaab impose a draconian interpretation of sharia on its people.  It has banned watching and playing soccer, dancing at weddings, listening to music, and the wearing of bras by women.  It holds public whippings of women who refuse to wear a veil, public amputations of convicted thieves, and public stonings of adulterers (and, in some cases, rape victims).  The group also has a well-trained and well-armed militia that includes hundreds of foreign fighters, including dozens from the U.S. and Europe.  It has conducted sophisticated terror attacks, including twin car bombings, on its targets inside Somalia.  It views itself as contributor to the global jihad led by al Qaeda and has threatened to attack the United States.  Perhaps most alarmingly, al Shabaab has extensive geographic space to train and plan for terrorist attacks due to its control of such large parts of Somalia.

Most alarmingly, al Shabaab has extensive geographic space to train and plan for terrorist attacks due to its control of such large parts of Somalia.

Tragically, al Shabaab has exploited the generosity of the United States and the broader international community by using foreign humanitarian aid to bolster its capacity and maintain its control of southern Somalia.  The group has raised funds through “taxing” aid distributors or forcing them to pay fees at checkpoints in order to operate in a given area.  In other cases, the UN has used Somali contractors sympathetic to al Shabaab who, instead of distributing food aid in its totality, would sell portions of it and then divert the revenue to al Shabaab for arms purchases. 
Moreover, al Shabaab operates an “Office for Supervising the Affairs of Foreign Agencies,” which plays the role of regulating foreign aid distribution in al Shabaab-controlled territories.  This administrative function achieves two significant objectives for al Shabaab.  First, it allows the group to define itself as the sole governing authority in southern Somalia.  Al Shabaab presents the impression to the Somali people and the international community that it is the legitimate authority in the region by dictating regulations to international organizations, such as the UN, and violently enforcing those regulations.  Second, by regulating foreign humanitarian aid, al Shabaab also defines itself as the protector of the Somali people and the United States as the enemy.  It justifies its regulatory measures by telling the Somali people that foreign aid is part of an American stratagem to undermine Somali farmers and make the Somali people dependent on infidels.  Defining itself as southern Somalia’s sole governing authority and the protector of the people only bolsters al Shabaab’s grip on power in the country. 
Humanitarian aid to southern Somalia will not improve the plight of the Somali people, nor will it enhance America’s security.  In fact, quite to the contrary, humanitarian aid to southern Somalia will strengthen a terror group that brutally oppresses the people under its control and has threatened to attack the United States.  But while withholding humanitarian aid to terrorist-controlled parts of Somalia successfully limits the worsening of conditions there, it alone fails to significantly reduce the threat posed by al Shabaab and improve the conditions for the Somali people.  The U.S. and its international partners must act urgently to develop a complete strategy to weaken al Shabaab. 
The U.S. State Department made the grudgingly painful yet correct decision to cut humanitarian aid to Somalia, and it must continue to ward off the pressure and criticism thrown its away by the United Nations.  Unfortunately though, the suffering of the Somali people will continue and the U.S. will remain at risk until the Obama administration recognizes the severity of the threat posed by al Shabaab and develops a comprehensive strategy to mitigate that threat.   
(*) Chris Harnisch is a research assistant at AEI.
 

No splitting hairs with Shebab fashion police (AFP)
Fashion in Somalia: Burkas, Bushy beards IN, tight jeans, Western clothing OUT 

Armed with assault rifles and scissors, the Shebab’s religious police are imposing a reign of terror – as well as crew cuts and bushy beards – on Somalia’s youth. 
Somalia was never an extreme Islamic society, but over past 20 years with flow of radical Islamist ideas, women and men have to dress in certain manner or suffer at hands of religious police! 
Wearing a T-shirt with a Western print, a pair of tight jeans and wavy gelled back hair, Ahmed Aydarus Abdi is a dedicated follower of fashion, but not the style advocated in the Shebab’s hardline Wahhabi brand of Islam. 
“I was stopped by Shebab gunmen who asked me questions about my haircut.
They said the way I designed my hair was very silly,” he said. 
“Without waiting for my reply, one of the gunmen pulled out a pair of scissors and cut off huge locks on one side of my head. He was dealing with it like it was grass, not human hair,” Abdi said. 
As he recounted how he reluctantly had to finish the job himself, the 19-year-old cast worried glances around him, aware that his appearance was likely still offensive to the canons of Shebab sartorial elegance. 
His friends encouraged him to comply. 
“If he had attempted to defend his right to wear his hair the way he chooses, he would have been lashed in public, so we restrained our friend,” 20-year-old Mohamoud Hassan said. 
“He was humiliated and cried after we left the Shebab behind,” he added. 
Fear runs high in the streets of Mogadishu, where residents are bracing for a huge offensive led by government troops and African Union forces against the Shebab-led insurgents.
The Shebab, whose leadership recently proclaimed allegiance to Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda, control around 80 per cent of the country. 
While the Shebab’s “Jaysh al-Usra” (Army of suffering) is planting bombs and preparing to counter their enemy, the movement’s other branch “Jaysh al-Hisbah” (Army of morality) is keeping civilians in check. 
Units known as the Islamic social mobilisation brigades criss-cross the busiest parts of town to blare instructions through loudspeakers: calls to join the global jihad, give to the poor and respect a pure Islamic clothing style. 
The population is routinely reminded by preachers in mosques that a full veil is recommended for women while Islamic gowns, short hair and long beards are more becoming for men. 
Many youths are outraged but complaining too loudly is not an option. 
“What is this? The Shebab are claiming to have political authority but they are behaving like fashion designers. What do they have to do with the way we dress or do our hair?,” said one indignant 21-year-old in Mogadishu. 
He asked to be named only as Abdullahi however: “You see, I live in the Bakara market area,” he said, referring to the capital’s main Shebab bastion. 
Not all young people disagree with the Shebab’s strict dress code, at least not in public. 
“I support the way of life being promoted by the Shebab. They are following Allah’s laws,” said Amina Abdurahman, a 23-year-old woman. 
She argued that France and Turkey applied equally draconian rules by banning headscarves. “I haven’t heard the world condemning France or Turkey but every opportunity seems good to denounce the Shebab and the Taliban.” 
One youth in Adle village, near Mogadishu, recounted how his house was raided by Shebab following a tip-off as he was watching a pirated copy of a film called “Ninja Killer” with a group of friends. 
“Most of us jumped out the windows. Unfortunately, I was one of the six who got caught and flogged for misconduct,” Abdulle Moalin Hassan said. 
Fear of the religious police has other consequences on people’s daily lives. 
When buses drive into Shebab-controlled areas, the driver only needs to shout “is hagaajiya” (re-arrange) for the men and women to hastily split and take seats in their respective ends of the vehicle. 
“I tell the passengers to split in two groups when we approach Shebab areas. They can’t be mixed, especially if they are not married,” Mogadishu bus driver Ali Mohamed told AFP.
Local Shebab “governor” Ali Mohamed Hussein recently explained to bus owners that the ladies should be seated at the back “to have enough ventilation because they are wearing the hijab approved by Allah”.
 


21 February 1543 – 467 Years After the Death of the Greatest African of the 2nd Millennium by Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
Reflecting the genuine African identity in all his deeds, protracting the greatness of so many noble rulers of the African Past, and at the same time, heralding the struggle of today´s tyrannized Ogadenis, Oromos, Tuareg, Furis, Sidamas, Afars. Luos and Berbers, the Somali King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim died in battle 467 years ago. 
Standing at the end of a long line involving the Hamitic King Perehu of Punt (who made 2nd millennium BCE Somalia outshine Egypt), the Egyptian Pharaohs Thutmosis III and Ramses II, the Kushitic – Egyptian Pharaoh Taharqa (who ruled a 2500 km long country alongside the Nile), the Ethiopian (Sudanese – not Abyssinian) Qore (King) Nastasen, the Great Qore Arkamani-qo, the Forefather of today´s Oromos, Sidamas and the other persecuted Kushitic peoples, and Qore Shorkaror, the Vanquisher of the Axumite Abyssinians, the Somali King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim rose to power in the early 16th century, and led Islamic Eastern Africa to the climax of its power, wealth, and civilization. 
Standing at the origin of millions of African fighters who sacrificed themselves in order to liberate their lands from the scourge of the European racist colonialism and evildoing, the Somali King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim is – more than any other ruler, leader, intellectual, erudite or spiritual leader – the embodiment of the African Struggle for Identity, Integrity, Self-determination, Humanity and Renaissance. 
The present article does not reflect an interest for a biographical sketch. Arabic and Portuguese books have been elaborated about him, and his legendary bravery, prowess, and tenacity, already during the period of his unmatched exploits. These books are the basic historical sources for us today to reconstitute the 16th century East African History; one of them is the famous Conquest of Abyssinia, Futuh al Habasha.
In the present article, I want mainly to underscore the fact that the Somali King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim represents the best model, ideal, prototype, and point of reference of every African activist, fighter, leader, liberation front member, intellectual, scholar or spiritual leader today. 
With his struggle against the Portuguese colonial army that tried to recollect the remnant of the then defunct Abyssinian kingdom and in the process spread division and discord, King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim demonstrates that there is no European superiority over Africa – in any way. Compared to King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim, his contemporary counterparts and rivals, the Portuguese kings, Manuel I and Joao, can be almost categorized as illiterate; the latter´s lack of culture became a subject of discussion for his own chronicler! Measured up to King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim, Manuel I and Joao seem to be rulers of palatial conspiracy and intrigue rather than frontline military leaders of ardor and virtue. 
Precisely because of the fact that today there is no paradigm better than King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim for any African, either Muslim, Christian or follower of traditional religions, the ruling elite of the Western world strives to ensure that little is only said about the Great African King, and more importantly that it is all flawed with numerous inaccuracies, absolutely false contextualization, partly oblivion, distortion of historical truth, and effective adjustment to the aforementioned elite´s needs of falsification. 
The deplorable effort of forgery of any historical event pertaining to King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim permeates everything. Subjective approaches, biased comments, evident hatred for the Great Somali King is attested everywhere. From the entries of Wikipedia to the fallacious English edition of the Arabic historical source, the aforementioned book Futuh al Habasha (published by the Tsehai Publishers in September 2003 / http://www.amazon.com/Futuh-Al-Habasha-Conquest-Abyssinia-Al-Habasa/dp/0972317252; acceptably translated from Arabic to English by Paul Lester Stenhouse, but viciously annotated by the fake historian Richard Pankhurst who has been for decades on the payroll of the deep, racist, Abyssinian state, during the royal, communist and pseudo-republican regimes), all deserve to be refuted one by one. 
Western racist bogus-scholars, like the professional falsifier Richard Pankhurst, write out of venomous hatred and malignant rancor, shedding an incredible, Anti-African poison in order to spread their premeditated schemes, rants and obscurantism worldwide. Their effort to denigrate King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim results in more than one mistake per each line of their mistaken texts. 
It is evident that complete refutation is impractical and unnecessary; it would take an entire encyclopedia to refute a book, and a book to refute an article. I intend however to publish several articles – examples of refutation of the lies shamelessly published by several authors, and more particularly wikipedia. 
The Anti-African effort of vilification is overwhelming. In the brief description of the book published in the Amazon website (see above link), King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim is not a king anymore (!) but a mere “imam”. This is ludicrous. In the traditional Sunni Islam, the caliph and the imam have to be the same person. Can one professional historian imagine to call Emperor (Caliph) Harun al Rashid an “imam”? This would be a total fallacy, because certainly Harun al Rashid was the spiritual leader of all the Muslims in his vast empire and beyond, but this does not concern Political History.
And the military events, as well as the political developments, involve no imams at all. If the participants happen to be religious leaders (either at a limited local level or nationwide), they don´t take part in the events under this specific qualification; and this means that the mention is irrelevant because the only that matters is under what qualification they took active part in the event described and commented. 
And of course, with his capital at Awdal, King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim was the imam of all the East believers, ruling an area of almost the size of today´s Somalia, Djibouti, Eritrea and Abyssinia (fake Ethiopia) combined. Certainly, he was not the Caliph, because a few years earlier the Ottoman Sultan had taken the insignia of the Islamic Caliphate from Cairo to Istanbul (1517). But Ahmed ibn Ibrahim was certainly a Muslim king who referred to the Sultan as his supreme authority, like many other kings. And King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim was well recognized as such. 
For the historical forgers of the level of Pankhurst, there is a simple, and impossible to answer, question – as regards the real rank of Ahmed ibn Ibrahim:
How would he be able to obtain official support from the Sublime Porte, if he were not an important Muslim king already recognized the Sultan´s authority?
There is no doubt that to take all the reinforcements mentioned in wikipedia {http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish-Portuguese_War_(1538-1557)}, one had to be of a significantly high rank, not a mere imam or local military ruler. 
As a matter of fact, never ever an Abyssinian ruler managed to control such a vast territory, and this historical reality greatly displeases the Amhara and Tigray Abyssinians who know that, when it comes to great historical achievements, they are inferior to the Somalis. This deep knowledge generates a compact, psychological complex of inferiority that permeates the minds of all the Monophysitic (Tewahedo) Abyssinians, and this complex is the reason of the atrocities the soldiers of Meles Zenawi perpetrated at Mogadishu. 
Having correctly assessed this reality, the evil Freemasonic Orientalists of England and France try to please their Abyssinian slaves (they view them like that – never as homologues or partners), writing the version of pseudo-History that supposedly heals (but unfortunately, it allegedly worsens) the immense Abyssinian complex of historical inferiority and well hidden humiliation. 
To do so, the Freemasonic Orientalists of the West employ a huge arsenal of fake terms. Indicatively, in the aforementioned text – description, King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim is called Gurey (which is a Somali name used about the great king in an informal way) or even Gran, which is an Abyssinian derogatory term. The famous Yemenite author Shahab al-Din Ahmed b. Abdul Qadir, who wrote the historical text, becomes a “Yamani author” (!) so that nobody identifies him correctly.
In an effort to defame the great conquest of King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim, the Freemasonic Orientalists turned his superb – and unique during the entire 2nd millennium in Africa – military exploits to a “Jihad or holy war” – term good enough to discredit the historical event and the perpetrators. 
And as every African can guess, in this text, there is no mention of the Portuguese army, so that the ignorant Western reader fails to properly contextualize the event and accurate perceive the significance of the great African hero; thus Western readership ends up considering the event as part of an Islamic Jihad and not as an Anti-colonial war. 
In several forthcoming articles, I will expand on the subject. At this point, I want to terminate this contribution to a Pan-African Commemoration, by making known that for Arabic speaking readers the original Arabic text of the Conquest of Abyssinia is available online here: http://community.webshots.com/user/SomaliConquestofAbyssinia
I herewith copy the introductory text that accompanies the pages of the book: 
Somali Conquest of Abyssinia (Futuh al-Habasha) by Shahab al-Din Ahmed b. Abdul Qadir 
The famous 16th century Yemenite erudite Shahab al-Din Ahmed b. Abdul Qadir is the primary source for the Somali conquest of the tiny Abyssinian kingdom that comprised the Monophysitic (Tewahedo) Amhara and Tigray tribes. Led by the Great Somali King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim, the Somali army marked several victories over the Abyssinians and their Portuguese allies, heralding therefore the Era of National Liberation struggles of all the African peoples. 
That is why the anniversary of the death of the Great Somali King (21 February 1543) must become an All African Day and a Liberation Jubilee in recognition of the tremendous contribution of King Ahmed ibn Ibrahim to the Most Glorious Page of 2nd Millennium African History. 


————–  reports, news and views from the global village with an impact on Somalia ——————- 

Somali rebels recruiting in Kenya by Koert Lindijer (RadioNetherlands) 
Somali militant groups are using Kenya as a hunting ground for new recruits for the war in their country. RNW’s Koert Lindijer found one young man who’s been targeted in this way, and also a Kenyan mayor who dares to speak out against this illegal practice. 
Abdullahi, a businessman in Garissa, a town in northeast Kenya, businessman says, “We’re making big profits because of the war in Somalia [...] a lot of money and goods moved from Somalia to Garissa and our town has benefited as a result.” 
Meanwhile, there’s another ‘import’ from Kenya’s northerly neighbour, for the extremist Islamist Somalian organisation al-Shabaab is keen to hire local youngsters here after they’ve been trained for the Kenyan army. 
Islamic preacher Hussein Mahat points to the dangers of Kenya becoming too involved in the problems of neighbouring Somalia: “The practice of recruiting fighters on Kenyan territory for the war in Somalia, effectively wipes out our neutrality. Kenya has become a front-line state”. 
He adds, “We ethnic Somalis are already regarded as second-class citizens in Kenya and this can only make that worse. Sometimes I wonder whether it wouldn’t be better to go and live in Somalia”. 
Cows and camels
Northeast Kenya looks a lot like Somalia; it’s dry, hot and dusty. And there are a lot of cows and camels. Many of them can be found at Garissa’s market, which the traders say is the biggest cattle market in all east Africa. A lot of the goods in the town come from Kismayo, a large port city in southern Somalia.
Many people in Garissa say that ties with Somalia have become a bit too tight recently. Over the last few months, both the Kenyan government and the al-Shabaab extremists have stepped up their recruiting efforts among young men in the border town. 
One such young man is Ahmed – not his real name, but he doesn’t want any unwelcome publicity. He explains: “They recruited us for the Kenyan army but wanted us to fight in the Somali government army”.
“Now the militants of al-Shabaab are trying to recruit us, but that’s not what we were promised.” 
Ahmed and 90 other recruits were trained in a small Kenyan village and then in Tsavo national park for about four months. They trained alongside Somali refugees recruited from United Nations camps inside Kenya. Ahmed finally quit under pressure from his parents. 
Brave Mayor
Garissa has a brave mayor, Mohamed Gabow. He’s brave because he listened to the parents’ complaints and exposed the illegal recruitment practices by the Kenyan authorities. A whistleblower who’s taken on the Kenyan government. “When one side starts recruiting, it encourages the other side to do the same,” he points out. And that was exactly what happened after the boys returned home as a result of the publicity the mayor had given to their ordeal. 
Their military training had increased the value of Ahmed and other recruits for the warring parties in Somalia. Now they are regularly approached at the market in Garissa. 
“Al-Shabaab is offering us 2,000 dollars,” Ahmed reveals. No one in authority in Garissa is prepared to say so officially, but everyone in the town knows it: al-Shabaab is illegally recruiting fighters inside Kenya. 
Radical message
Those in the know say the fundamentalist group is not only active in the northeast but also in Eastleigh, a district of the capital Nairobi where many Somalis live. “Al-Shabaab fighters come here for a few days rest,” says Somalian journalist Abdulkarim Jimale. “Wounded fighters are treated anonymously in Kenyan hospitals, and al-Shabaab has been trying to persuade mullahs to preach its radical message in Kenyan mosques.” 
Life in Eastleigh doesn’t appear to be bad. Expensive apartments now rise above the grimy food kiosks in the muddy streets. Banks, bureaux de change, stylish restaurants and expensive hotels are flanked by mountains of stinking rubbish. A lot of private money circulates among the Somalis in this neighbourhood. 
Apparent wealth
This apparent wealth, together with the likely presence of al-Shabaab irritates many Kenyans. “Somalis are invading Kenya and taking our land,” says a market stallholder in the centre of Nairobi. “They want to destroy Kenya, just as they did to their own country,” snarls an elderly man. 
Somalis are easy scapegoats in Kenya. They’re stubborn, nomadic and Muslim. Fear of Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism has led to the stigmatisation of an entire ethnic group. In Eastleigh, Somali clan elder Mohamed Ali is angry. “Why would we support al-Shabaab? Muslim extremists are the very reason we had to flee our homeland Somalia.” 


BBC investigates “Generation Jihad” Marian (Somalia) (MideastYouth)
Now, if you have watched Muslim Driving School you will have to agree that the BBC has not been doing a good job with their documentaries about Muslims these past months. Muslim Driving School is a series which follows the stories of a group of Muslim women who are taking driving lessons. The sort of stuff on telly George Bush would probably watch. The documentary begins with the narrator saying “There’s a quiet revolution taking place in Britain today” and then clips of Pakistani women driving cars. A revolution? Did they seriously have to call it that. Pathetic. If Bush did watch it, then I am sure he is proud.
Generation Jihad is a two part documentary aired on BBC2 on the 8th and 15th February. BBC journalist Peter Taylor investigates the threat of radicalised young Muslims in the UK.  He looks closely at the reasons behind why they may have become radicalised and how they are able to form terrorist cells across the globe.
I thought I’d give you a description of the documentary in the way that the general British public sees it. Now, to be honest I no longer watch documentaries about Muslims, as a young Muslimah you can probably guess why. Although the title of this documentary sounds like typical anti-Islam propaganda, I gave it a chance. Peter Taylor may be a  journalist whose views I do not always agree with but unlike a lot of Western journalists he has a fair stab at making his documentaries unbiased and factual. Experienced in the industry, Taylor has spent more than 35 years reporting on terrorism and political violence, covering conflicts in Northern Ireland; Spain; the Middle East and Africa.
The opening scenes show young Muslim men protesting, some wearing thobes while most are bearded, shouting and waving placards as police officers arrest –cough-disperses the crowds.  There are a few shots of women in niqab (I guess that is supposed to be a hint that niqab adds to the terror scare). A typical opening of a documentary about Muslims, as a matter of fact, this is the ideal recipe for a thrilling heart stopping documentary. To make your own frightening documentary about extremists just include the following; clips of angry Muslim men with beards; scary music; scenes from previous terror attacks; women in niqab; more scary music.
“Generation Jihad is smart, well-educated, living in places like Bradford, West Yorkshire” says Kohlman, a terrorism expert. By well educated one immediately imagines an individual with perhaps one or more university degrees, possibly from a respected institution. However Peter Taylor interviews two young lads, who seem to have pretty humble jobs, and from what I remember they’d dropped out of higher education. This leads me to pose a question, why is the media so reluctant to portray Muslims who hold degrees as a threat? At the end of last month, The Times published a story which was titled “UK students recruited for Somali jihad”. This infuriated a lot of Somali students and at Kingston University they planned to sue The Times. I was jealous in a way, because I wasn’t part of condemning the story nor was I using my time to write pages and pages of complaint letters. Yet at the same time, I couldn’t understand why everybody was fussing, shouldn’t young Muslims be used to the media already? In my university prayer room, the sisters at times get into all sorts of discussions from Religion to politics, and when we do get into political arguments, usually another sister jokingly mentions that there are cameras recording us. Generation Jihad could be any young Muslim really, especially if you possess a degree.
I enjoy watching Peter Taylor’s documentaries but this was by far the most disappointing. BBC, we are not getting on this month. If you havent seen it, I still advice you to watch it. As you can see, I have given up writing a review. Laziness is a disease.


Sheikh Abdirahman Abyad imprisoned for alleged death threats against Danish party leader;
Five other Somalis arrested but released (TFSF)

Danish police made the following arrests:

1)      Sh. C/Raxmaan Abyad aka sheak abdirahman abdyed
2)      Cali Warsame aka ali warsame
3)      C/Shakuur Khaalid Cali Guul abdishakur ali gul
4)      Bile Xasan aka bile hasan
5)      Faysal Maxamed Xirsi aka faysal mahamad hirsi
6)      Iyo qof haweeney waayeel ah oo indha la’ oo eeddo u ah sheikh C/Raxmaan oo ku nool guriga sheekha. ..

ANONYMOUS HINT
An anonymous tip led to the arrest of five men who allegedly planned to have DF’s Pia Kjærsgaard killed
Five men have been arrested in connection with death threats allegedly having been made against Danish People’s Party leader Pia Kjærsgaard.
Four of the five men were subsequently released by police, but the fifth remains in custody. The men are reportedly Somali and the man in custody is known to intelligence service PET, reported Politiken newspaper.
According to the Danish People’s Party (DF), a 500,000 kroner reward was offered in connection with carrying out the death threats against Kjærsgaard. The party indicated its head office received a letter written in English from an anonymous source with details about the planned hit and the suspects’ names.
Police ransacked the suspects’ flats yesterday, but later stated there was not sufficient evidence to hold the other four men, although charges are still pending against all five. The man still in custody is also being charged with possession of counterfeit money, as he had 50 phony 500 kroner notes on him at the time of the arrest.
Police have not yet confirmed that there was any reward offered, and they emphasized that they have yet to find any concrete evidence that links the men to threats. The possibility that someone was attempting to frame the men is also being investigated.
Kjærsgaard was on the last day of a holiday abroad when the story broke the news. She returned yesterday and admitted she was shaken by the letter, but said she had confidence the police would handle the matter.
‘I’m not happy about it, of course,’ she said. ‘The threat was very detailed and that makes it more unpleasant than previous threats against me. But unfortunately it’s something that goes with being a politician in Denmark.’


Saeed Al-Shihri, prisoner No. 327 at Guantanamo bay…
No. 2 of Al-Qaeda Organization…Guantanamo: creating the most dangerous enemies of America (YemenPost)

In his third public appearance since he became the deputy leader of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula AQAP, Saeed Al-Shihri or as called ‘’Abu Sufyan Al-Azdi” publicized a message denying the news of his promoted death along with the organization’s leader Nasser Al-Wahayshi in an attack by a military aircraft in the Yemeni province of Shabwa on the 24th of last December. 
The appearance of Al-Shihri instead of Al-Wahayshi made many analysts say that Al-Wahayshi has been killed while Al-Shihri survived the attack and took command of the organization in Yemen. 
The opinions are based on speculation not on information, the appearance of the second man, the wanted No. 31 on the list of the 85 terrorism suspects for the security services in Saudi Arabia. 
The list includes two wanted Yemenis, Nasser Al-Wahayshi and Qassim Al-Raimi. 
His appearance would send a message that the organization exceeded locality and became an international organization that its Yemeni-Saudi leadership share the responsibility of making decisions and route messages. 
And it is not subjected to any form of bureaucracy and centralization as it is ruled by the coordination relations between its leaders. At the same time, the letter addressed to members of the organization in Saudi Arabia as Al-Shihri is in charge of recruitment and funding. 
The voice recording of Al-Shihri did not bring up nothing new, he brought repeated threats of operations designed to control Bab Al-Mandab strait, to emphasize that Al Qaeda was behind the attempt by the Nigerian Umar Farouk to attack a U.S. airplane on the eve of New Year’s Day, and to announce that he survived together with the organization leaders of the operations carried out against them in Abyan, Arhab, Shabwa, Al Ashajer and Marib, in addition to telling about the role of Egypt and Saudi Arabia in the war against Al-Qaeda in Yemen. 
What’s new in the Saudi Saeed Al-Shihri’s recording is his indication of the plan to have U.S. troops inside Yemen to hunt down Al-Qaeda members. He called it the Petraeus plan in comparative to the U.S. Central Command Chief Gen. David Petraeus, author of the ‘’Practical Guide for Islamic Warriors’’ the war against Al-Qaeda, which was distributed to American fighters in Iraq and Afghanistan. 
According to Al-Shihri, Petraeus’s plan was implemented in Iraq and focuses on three parts; first, mobilizing Muslims against each other a so-called (Al-Sahawat) that makes the war between Muslims. 
Second, discredit Jihadists actions as sabotage acts such as the bombing of mosques, markets, and the assassination of some prominent Islamic leaders. 
Third, broadcasting spies and money for Muslim masses via the international Intelligence.” 
Al-Shihri, 35-year-old did not finish high school and worked on trade before joining Al-Qaeda. Yemeni authorities accuse him of being behind the operation that targeted the U.S. embassy in Sana’a. 
He did not ignore in his recording to try to mobilize the Yemeni tribes behind Al-Qaeda in the AQAP, where he said the air strikes that targeted the movement was aimed at killing innocent civilians, and that U.S. spy planes are limiting the sites of the coming massacres, which will kill the innocent civilians, according to him. 
Like Bin Laden, Al-Dhawaheri, Abu Musab Al-Suri, Naji Ibrahim, Nasser Al-Wuhayshi and other Al-Qaeda leaders, he directed his speeches to the tribes of Yemen in an attempt to emotionally bring them to stand behind Al-Qaeda and to promote it. 
Saeed Bin Ali Bin Jaber Al-Shihri, who was arrested near the Pakistani-Afghani border at the end of 2001, trained on the methods of fighting inside cities in a camp located in the north of Kabul, Afghanistan, according to documents disclosed by the Pentagon as part of his file in Guantanamo Bay. 
He arrived in Afghanistan two weeks after the September 11 attacks 2001, via Bahrain and Pakistan. Afterward, American interrogators said that he sought to participate in relief efforts. Also, He was wounded during an air strike, and remained hospitalized for one and half months in Pakistan. 
Before leaving for Guantanamo Bay, he was detained for six years carrying the number 372 in the prison of Guantanamo Base, then he was received by Saudi Arabia along with 11 others including the former leader of Al-Qaeda Mohammed Al-Awfi who both underwent the counseling program of the Saudi intelligence for a year before he disappeared to appear later in Yemen in mid-2008. 
After the appearance of the last audio recording of Al-Shihri, a Yemeni security official initiated to say that the appearance of Al-Shihri points to the correctness of the announcement by the Yemeni Ministry of Defense after the air strike against members of the organization in Shabwa last December that Nasser Al-Wahayshi, Al-Qaeda leader in the AQAP, was killed in the air-strike. 
The appearance of Al-Shihri is evidence of becoming actually the leader of the organization instead of Al-Wahayshi. 
But, the closest understanding is that the appearance of Al-Shihri is a desire by the organization to give an impression by the level of partnership in decision-making between the Yemeni local leaders and Saudi leaders. 
Meanwhile, Al-Shihri succeeded in smuggling his wife Wafa Al-Shihri to Yemen, together with her three children. 
According to information broadcasted by the Saudi security services, the ages of the three sons of Wafa Al-Shihri, range between nine years and six months, the first child 9-year-old is called Yusuf from her first husband, Saud Al-Qahtani, second, Wasif five years also of a former husband Abdul Rahman Al-Ghamdi, and the daughter of Saeed Al-Shihri. 
That Information adds that the links of Wafa Al-Shihri, who is also known as Omm Hajer to Al-Qaeda, have deepened after her marriage to two persons belonging to Al Qaeda. 
The subject of Wafa Al-Shihri and her children, who is classified as the first woman officially listed by the security services as a member of Al-Qaeda, is one of the reasons that could have lead to the assassination of the Saudi Deputy Interior Minister Mohammed Bin Nayef when Abdullah Asiri was meeting with him, where Asiri said in a phone call while he was in Yemen with Mohammed Bin Nayef that among the topics he wants to meet with her about, is the subject of preparing for her return and her children to the Kingdom. 
Saeed Al-Shihri got married to Wafa after returning from Guantanamo Bay through her brother, Yusuf Al-Shihri the wanted person No. 85 to the Saudi authorities. He was Saeed’s companion in Guantanamo Bay. Yusuf Al-Shihri was killed in October of 2009 in a clash with Saudi security after he was able with his fellow Raed Al-Harbi to infiltrate the territory of Saudi Arabia. The Saudi intelligence announced that it found in Yusuf Al-Shihri’s phone an audio video recording for Saeed Al-Shihri requesting for financial support. 
Al-Shihri asked Al-Qaeda followers in Saudi Arabia to raise money supports for Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in which he said “what your brothers are doing in the land of Yemen of blessed Jihad against the enemies of religion of (Jews and Christians) needs lifeblood and the backbone of jihad, which is money. 
The video Saeed Al-Shihri appeared on, with a member of the organization, Mohammed Abdul Karim Al-Ghazali, who was added to the wanted list of the Saudi authorities in Yemen, exposed the way the organization collects donations through persons were sent by registered recommendations of Al-Shihri, where Al-Ghazali tried to use that letter to collect donations from citizens in favor of Al-Qaeda, as he was sent and trusted by Al-Shihri. 
According to the Saudi Interior Ministry, that way was followed by the organization to collect donations during last pilgrimage (hajj) season. Saudi security forces seized people carrying video messages on their mobile phones from Ayman Al-Dhawaheri, calling for contribution for the organization. 
Al-Shihri added on his letter, “that Prophet Muhammed peace be upon him said: ‘’’fight the polytheists with your wealth, yourselves and your tongues’’’. This is our brother, the bearer of this letter is one of the scholars we have, and he left to invite you to what has been commanded by God (Allah) in the process of spending your money on Jihad.” 
This is what calls to say that Al-Shihri is responsible for the financing and recruitment processes within the organization. The large amount funding for Al-Qaeda in Yemen still comes from supporters of Al-Qaeda in Saudi Arabia. 
The recent Al-Shihri speech about the coordination efforts with the organization of the Young Mujahideen in Somalia; perhaps is a first step towards integration with them in a standardized format, in addition to distract the Western intelligence services and security services of Yemen and turn them toward Somalia, to enable the organization to catch its breath and plan for retaliatory operation in a place far from Bab Al-Mandab, which may lead to the disruptions and increase the readiness of security, which would increase the expenses of protecting specially protecting vessels there, as a part of the attrition strategy followed by the organization. 
Al-Shihri statements established an additional burden on Yemen relating to the credibility of the official announcements about the victories achieved in the fight against Al-Qaeda on the ground, where still most of the leaders of Al-Qaeda in Yemen have the ability to plan attacks against Yemeni and foreign interests. 
The fighters from Saudi citizens form a great danger, not against Yemen only but also against Saudi Arabia, where the organization stated more than once its desire to launch attacks against Saudi Arabia from Yemen.

Africans solutions are the best for Africans problems by Isaiah Abraham (*) (SudanTribune)

We have heard this statement from Pan African founders in the persons of Patrice Emery Lumumba of Congo, Francis Ohanyido of Nigeria, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Haile Selassia of Ethiopia, Ahmed Sekou Toure of Guinea, Dr. Julius Kambarge Nyerere of Tanzania and the renowned artist Bob Marley from Jamaica/United States. There couldn’t be more than just socio-political movement in Pan Africanism surge at that time, something we can’t overestimated given our diversity. Yet Africa would have gained more if it had integrated Pan Africanism principles in their daily political life of the Africans. No one at his era outside there has African future in the heart; we are de trop to many. In the earlier 1960s the West was real, but that has fairly changed. Sincerely, we are yet independence, a sad truth we can do something about it before someone finishes us economically and politically. 
Africa would have been ahead by now if African leaders struck their neck out against Western interference in the affairs of the continent. President Idris Deby of Chad underscored this point last week when he paid keen attention to his conscience in his visit to his Sudanese counterpart President Omar Hassan Al Bashir in Khartoum. The West was snubbed and miffed, but Africans celebrated the angel of peace in the person of Idris Deby Itno. His feet were invigorated in the African spirit of forgive and forget, a shock to peremptory good guys who want to be seen doing something for Africans, when in fact their agenda is always different. His knew the West outmoded diplomatic failures have hurriedly killed African renaissance and progress. What a man that is (President Deby)! 
The Good Book (The Bible) again is explicit about events in time; there is time for everything. Peace has beckoned across our continent, leaders have the moral responsibility to read those signs and move people away from Western orchestrated crisis (wars). The man who claimed (say have been claimed) to be god and was idolize around the world (Barrack Obama) has since gone in to hiding after he burned his fingers in Israelis-Palestinian conflict, Iran Nuclear suspected ambition/impasse, North Korea bold face, Global warming/Greenhouse gas emission challenge, Afghanistan NATO led operations and Democratic transition problems in Iraq. 
President Obama seems to have been overweighed by his domestic issues on the expense of his global initiatives including that of the Africa continent. His predecessor is fondly remembered in Africa for his aid package in the tune of $4 billions. At best President George Walker Bush had an agenda for Africa, President Obama Hussein has none, saved for his rhetoric that isn’t specific. His father home is burning and he never lifted a finger to help his cousins find peace as the Kenyan death year (elections year) draws nearer. 
Somali is one dark spot/big pain that needs African solution. The US created it and continuous to fuel it (am blunt, yeah?), like other conflicts in the continent, but Africans have the duty to save lives of innocent Africans in Somali. The West is cruel and if the continent waits for its help, we shall have a long wait indeed! President Deby didn’t wait to tell Dr. Khalil Ibrahim of Justice and Equality (JEM) to join Sudan peace train and its democratic transformation. President Al Bashir didn’t wait for the West for him to agree with Dr. John Garang. The West desperately was rushing Garang to sign an agreement right in 2003 with so many important areas hanging. Some of them had hurled nasty remarks (insults) against Garang for his slow pace. However, Ms Hilde Johnson of then Norwegian International Development Ministry refused to budge. May God Almighty bless this lady wherever she might be! I named my daughter after this lady. 
We live in a dangerous world; a place where interest is everything. Africa is a dumping ground and unless we stand up on our own, the likes of Luis Moreno Ocampo, a US stooge, will have reason to abuse the continent at will. Sudanese from all walks of life are yearning for peace. People crave for peace and any messenger of peace anywhere in the world is our true friend. JEM leadership has realized this fact and the country is moving towards a healing and transtion from war to peace and development. Retribution is devilish and is bad! A bygone is a bygone; we can’t be allowed by others to dwell in the past; we got to move our country to the next generation towards peace and progress. 
Peace in Chad and Sudan is gregariously peace for Africa. President Mau mar Al Kaddafi knew it earlier. Africans must learn from its past mistakes and listen to voices of great founding leaders. Presidents Deby, Al Bashir, we are proud of you! Accommodate Darfur in the Presidency and everywhere. Complete the process of compensation and put back life into that region. African Union (AU) therefore should now move swiftly to entrenched the initiative by two great sons of Africa; they got to do it before the West botch the exercise altogether. The West wants to be in anything, they got to leave the continent to try its problems alone. Money alone can’t buy peace for the continent. 
UN effort across the continent moreover is of great concern. Its roles have been proven woeful due to its abuses. In the Sudan, especially in the South, there are horrific stories about the force and their activities in general. There are deaths and killings everyday in this part of the world (South) and the so-called peacekeepers never conclusively find an answer to what peace are they keeping, when civilians routinely attack each other. May be after we see the light at 2011, the UN will have to pack and go, our people shall see what to do with their colored children they have been fathering everywhere, the only positive thing I think they are best doing to our people. Africans solutions are the best! 
Differently: our security forces must ignore Kiir directives on their neutrality. Our people should stand with the ‘devil’ we all know than the ‘angel’ we don’t know. Comrade Salva Kiir Mayardit and his running mate Dr. Riek Machar Teny weaknesses are our own (we know when to correct them); we can’t stand aside and allow those who sat in the fence when things were tough to usurp people’s power. Return SPLM to power! 
(*) Isaiah Abraham lives in Juba

‘Blood diamonds’ inspire ‘conflict minerals’ campaign by Kevin J. Kelly (DN)
A campaign is growing in the United States to end wars and atrocities in eastern Congo by discouraging the export of what organisers describe as “conflict minerals.”The effort is inspired by the movement a few years ago that helped stop murderous conflicts in West Africa by successfully targeting the “blood diamonds” that were financing them.

The Congo initiative is also modelled on the influential US varsity-based campaign to halt mass killings in Darfur as well as on the earlier push against US corporate investment in apartheid South Africa.
Prof Herbert Weiss, a Congo expert at a Washington think tank, noted at a US university forum last week that an increasing number of Americans are at last paying attention to Congo.
The organiser of the conflict-minerals campaign John Prendergast told activists to rally behind proposals in the US Congress to create a global certification system for four valuable metals found in large quantities in Congo.
Monitoring would be put in place to ensure lawful control of these minerals, which are essential for the manufacture of telecommunications devices, Mr Prendergast said.
Such a certification system is needed to squelch eastern Congo’s “mafia economy,” he added. “Until the logic of illegal mineral extraction is transformed,” Mr Prendergast said, “peacekeepers will have little impact.”
The dons of this mafia economy operate out of Kampala and Kigali as well as in Kinshasa, he observed.
Minerals mined in eastern Congo by warlords make their way via Uganda and Rwanda to smelters in Asia overseen by multinational companies, added Mr Prendergast.
He noted that Congo is a leading source of four minerals — “gold and the three T’s” — essential to the workings of mobile telephones, computers and digital music players.
Mr Prendergast explained that gold is used to coat the wiring of these devices; tantalum, also known as coltan, acts as a coolant; tungsten lights the screen on mobile phones; and the devices’ components are soldered with tin.
“US consumers play a direct but inadvertent role in perpetuating the violence in Congo,” he told an audience at St Michael’s College in the northern state of Vermont.
But the campaign he leads — Raise Hope for Congo — is not calling for a boycott of consumer electronics, nor does it seek to ban purchase of gold and the three T’s from the DRC.
A consumer boycott would be impractical because the devices have become integral to everyday life in the United States, Mr Prendergast said.
And Raise Hope for Congo sees properly regulated mineral exports as a potential engine for development in the DRC.


EA’s unholy nexus: Diamonds, guns and money-laundering by Leon Kukkuk (TheEastAfrican)
In line with a number of East African countries, Uganda’s parliament has started formulating a law against money laundering.
The intention is to bring all the money laundering laws in the EAC and SADC regions in line with one each another other and thus stem the flow of funds from the illegal economy into the legal economy.
The proposed law was cleared after the Bill was published in the government gazette in August 2009.
Nevertheless, Uganda taken made no significant steps to fight money laundering.
It appears that the whole anti-money laundering initiative in the EAC zone is driven by international pressure based on concerns regarding terrorism funding and drug trafficking.

This leaves huge gaps in the laws as well as the political will to determine what will be monitored and prosecuted.
Money laundering is normally a complicated process, and may in fact have very little or nothing to do with terrorism funding.
With almost no statistics available in Uganda on money laundering activities, it is difficult to gauge the full extent of the problem.
It also just so happens that the Kimberly Process, the scheme of certificates of origin for diamonds launched in 2001 with the backing of UN Security Council resolutions, is unravelling.
Smuggling of resources from the Democratic Republic Congo (DRC) is rife.
While plundering the DRC, Uganda’s diamond exports to Belgium tripled. Uganda is not a diamond producing country.
The failure of the Kimberly Process could cause anti-money laundering initiatives to backfire.
If gold and diamonds can be easily procured in a hard-to-trace manner, it provides an alternative way to mop up any spare and unaccountable dollars floating about in the system from a number of illegal activities. It is also a convenient avenue to move wealth around the world in a difficult to detect manner.
With gold easing up to the $1,200 an ounce mark, it becomes an increasingly attractive means to store and hide wealth.
Diamonds too provide an excellent medium for money laundering.

They have a very high value to weight ratio and can be easily transported. Flows of funds from diamonds cannot be easily accounted for.
Widespread smuggling renders official export data misleading.
Data derived from imports by partner countries are not reliable either since many diamonds are smuggled to third countries before being officially shipped to diamond centres.
The UN Panel of Experts on Illegal Exploitation of the DRC have repeatedly reported on Congolese troops and militias connected to Ugandan politicians and military collaborators operating extortion and racketeering networks.
Militias responsible for plunder are sometimes disbanded, only to be replaced again and again by new military networks.
Christian Lukusha, an expert with Justice Plus, a human-rights NGO based in Bunia, reports that, “The Congolese military works with Ugandans, including senior government oficials. And they ship timber and minerals across the border at both Arua and Mahagi. It’s completely clandestine.”
A peculiar feature of the mining industry in the DRC is that poorly controlled artisanal mining, especially widespread in the Kasai region, accounts for 70 per cent of the national diamond production.
Thus, in spite of being the world’s third-largest diamond producer in terms of output, the country is ranked only seventh in terms of value.
The rebel-held area accounts for about half of the country, with illegal exports of gold, diamonds and various agricultural products used to finance ongoing instability and looting.
According to the Panel of Experts report of October 16, 2002 Uganda had set up a “Congo desk” run by a Lebanese diamond merchant. An Israeli diamond dealer then took over from him. Later still, the “Congo Desk” replaced the Israeli with a Lebanese, backed by comptoirs (middlemen) in Kisangani.
In addition, Rwanda has had a military presence in eastern DRC since 1996.
Likewise establishing informal networks to plunder, extort, and terrorise, top Rwandan officials transport diamonds from Kigali to Belgium on an international airline.
Mafia networks of Lebanese and Indian traders, many of them reorganised remnants of the Mobutu era, act as middlemen, backed by a variety of military structures.
Diamonds enter the international market through Belgian, Israeli and Russian buyers.
Many of these buyers work for the multinational diamond conglomerates, concerns such as Lazare Kaplan, De Beers, and Emaxon.

People in this illegal business are looked upon as untouchables.
Tanzania is one of the most underappreciated players in the smuggling of gold from the DRC and the smuggling of weapons to the DRC.
According to interviews by Keith Harmon Snow in March 2007, the Mwana Africa airstrip at Zani is used to fly gold to Tanzania, which is also sometimes shipped out by road through Uganda.
It would be useful to follow the flows of funds starting from the mining companies and ending with the taxes and licence fees that reach the Treasury. But this will not be enough to solve the problem.
Namibia, the 2009 chair of the Kimberley Process, warned that blood diamonds could be making a comeback, noting that Internet sales and postal shipments have “proved it difficult to track and reconcile rough diamond shipments.”
A campaign against money laundering co-ordinated by several institutions (banks, the OECD, The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative and Interpol) provides a promising avenue of co-operation with current attempts to monitor the origin of valuable resources.
On the one hand, these institutions could make use of additional information on illicit exports.
On the other hand, the measures taken by institutions to fight money laundering would help the legitimate resource industry by creating additional problems for smugglers and, therefore, raising the cost of smuggling.



Va. man accused of helping smuggle Somalis into U.S. by Freeman Klopott (WashExaminer)
Authorities are searching for 270 Somalis believed to have entered the U.S. illegally with the help of a Virginia man who admitted contacts with an Islamic terrorist group. 
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent said his agency had yet to locate any of the suspected illegal immigrants. 
According to an affidavit filed in Alexandria’s federal court, Anthony Joseph Tracy told authorities that he came in contact with the Somali terrorist organization Al-Shabaab, which announced an alliance with al Qaeda earlier this year. 
ICE Agent Thomas Eyre testified during a hearing that authorities are “concerned” about the 35-year-old’s dealings with the group. 
In an e-mail, Tracy reportedly wrote, “i helped alot of somalis and most are good but there are some who are bad and i leave them to ALLAH,” the affidavit said. 
He has been held without bail. Tracy’s attorney, Geremy Kamens, declined to comment for this story. 
Eyre testified that authorities had not yet tracked down any of the Somalis whom Tracy allegedly helped travel to the U.S. The affidavit says Tracy’s e-mails, combined with information on Facebook, show that the Somalis have spread across the country and are living in New York, North Carolina, Tennessee, Minnesota and Arizona. 
Eyre indicated authorities are trying to find the Somalis and determine whether they’re associated with Al-Shabaab. An ICE spokeswoman said she could not comment on an ongoing investigation. The Somalis are believed to have entered the United States through the border with Mexico after making a circuitous trip from Kenya to Dubai to Moscow to Cuba to South America to Mexico and then the U.S., Eyre testified. 
Vanessa Parra, a spokeswoman for Refugees International, estimated the trip could cost as much as $30,000. “It would be difficult for most Somalis to get that kind of money,” she said. 
Tracy, who moved to Kenya in April from Winchester, is accused of helping the Somalis move to the United States by getting them travel visas to Cuba through contacts he had at the Cuban Embassy, court documents said. The visas were issued using fraudulent information Tracy allegedly provided his contacts. Authorities say Tracy knew that the U.S. was the Somalis’ intended final destination. 


Is Harvard Prof Advocating Palestinian Genocide? by M.J Rosenberg (HuffingtonPost)
This has to be seen to be believed.
Dr. Martin Kramer, a fellow at Harvard’s National Security Studies Program, has posted a speech he delivered two weeks ago in Israel in which he urged solving the Palestinian refugee problem by population control i.e “stopping pro-natal subsidies to Palestinians with refugee status.” In other words, starve the Palestinians so they don’t have babies and, he seems to be saying, starving the babies so they don’t grow up.
That will help reduce the terrorist threat by preventing Palestinian babies from becoming “superfluous young men.” It is, Kramer says, those “superfluous young men” who become radicals.

Aging populations reject radical agenda and the Middle East is no different. Now eventually, this will happen among the Palestinians, too. But it will happen faster if the West stops providing pro-natal subsidies for Palestinians with refugee status. Those subsidies are one reason why in the ten years, from 1997 to 2007, Gaza’s population grew by an astonishing 40%. At that rate, Gaza’s population will double by 2030 to three million. Israel’s present sanctions on Gaza have a political aim, undermine the Hamas regime, but they also break Gaza’s runaway population growth and there is some evidence that they have. That may begin to crack the culture of martyrdom, which demands a constant supply of superfluous young men.

Here is Kramer himself touting his idea on his personal blog.
This is right out of Jonathan Swift. Instead of arguing for jobs, economic opportunity, and self-determination to ensure that these baby boys can have productive lives, Kramer argues for preventing them from growing up.
Watch the clip yourself. This guy, Harvard, Washington Institute of Near East Policy, and President of the Shalem Center in Jerusalem seems to be advocating genocide.Unbelievable. 
(Here is Kramer’s response to the above piece. It is, if anything, creepier than his original presentation. 
WATCH the VIDEO
(*) M.J Rosenberg – Senior Fellow Media Matters Action Network

Israel relies on a deadly specialty by Edmund Sanders
Dubai allegations put the Jewish state on the hot seat again for its use of assassinations.
When Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman faced questions Monday from European diplomats over Israel’s suspected role in the Dubai assassination of a Hamas militant, he responded with familiar indignation: Why is Israel always the first to be blamed, he asked. 
Perhaps no other country’s use of assassinations has been more scrutinized, condemned and celebrated than that of Israel. The policy is not likely to change, analysts and diplomats say, because such killings, from Israel’s point of view, have proved effective in fighting a nonconventional enemy. And despite legal questions and international backlash, Israel has usually emerged unscathed.
Confronting a hostile region, Israel sees targeted killings as an essential tool in decapitating militant groups or putting them on the defensive, experts say. 
“They seem to be extremely focused on this kind of tactic,” said Aaron David Miller, former U.S. negotiator in the Middle East and now scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington.
“This is the price of living in the neighborhood,” he added. “It’s a symptom of the ongoing confrontation and their perceptions about the long war. Both sides perceive that acting, even with the negative consequences to image and public diplomacy, is still effective and it’s going to continue.” 
Israel is certainly not the only nation to engage in targeted killings. Despite presidential orders to restrict political assassinations, the U.S. has killed terrorism suspects in Yemen, Pakistan and Somalia, usually with airstrikes. European spy agencies have also been accused of assassinations.
In 2001, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine killed Israel’s tourism minister at a Jerusalem hotel. Two months earlier, Israel had assassinated the group’s leader. 
Israel has been relatively open and public in defending its use of targeted killings. In 2006, the Israeli Supreme Court ruled the practice justified in some instances under international law. In addition, countless books and movies have mythologized the Israeli spy agency Mossad’s knack for revenge.
But when such activities occur on foreign soil, and evidence emerges implicating Israeli agents, the nation has found itself under fire. 
After the exposure of a 1997 attempt to poison Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal in Jordan, Israel was not only pressured by the Jordanian king to deliver an antidote, it also agreed to release another imprisoned Hamas leader as part of the apology.
But Israel had the last word, one might say. The released man, Sheik Ahmed Yassin, was assassinated in an Israeli airstrike seven years later. 
In the Dubai killing, Israel has refused to confirm or deny its role, though Dubai authorities say they’ve collected evidence implicating the Mossad.
Israel resorts to assassination, analysts say, because its superiority in military might only goes so far in defeating underground cells of militants. 
Such limits were apparent in the perceived failure of the 2006 war with Lebanon and the mixed results of the Israeli military’s offensive in the Gaza Strip a year ago.
“Targeted killings is a tool that is sometimes necessary,” said Yoram Schweitzer, senior fellow at Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies. “It’s a very delicate instrument, but as long as it is not used that often, it works.” 
He said the Mossad’s reported 1978 assassination of Palestinian militant Wadie Haddad, who was said to have been poisoned by a box of tainted chocolates, led to the collapse of Haddad’s terrorist cell.
Critics, however, question the legality of Israel’s use of targeted killings and say the violence only leads to retaliation. 
Though international attention usually focuses on attacks taking place on foreign soil, Israel’s military has killed several hundred suspected militants in Gaza since 2000, according to the Jerusalem-based human rights group B’Tselem. The group says the killings are at best a moral and legal gray area and at worst extrajudicial executions.
“The biggest problem is it’s completely nontransparent,” said B’Tselem Executive Director Jessica Montell. “They are killing people and saying [the person] was a senior operative. But we don’t know, because nobody has access to that information.”
Israeli commentator Guy Bechor says the hoopla over Israel’s role in the Dubai assassination has actually helped Israel by striking fear in enemies about a “crazy” aggressive nation that should not be messed with. 
Senior Hamas figure Mahmoud Mabhouh was killed in his Dubai hotel room in January by assassins whose pre- slaying moves were captured on a security video. Eleven people using fake European passports allegedly entered Dubai to carry out the killing of Mabhouh, who has been accused of smuggling arms from Iran and of involvement in the capture and killing of two Israeli soldiers in the 1980s.
Many here expect that despite the diplomatic protests from Britain, Ireland, France and Germany, whose passports were forged for use by the assailants, international outrage will fade — though the mesmerizing security camera video of the operation lives on. 
“After 9/11, people understand that democracy sometimes has to be not as clean as we would like it to be,” said former Mossad agent Gad Shimron.
Behind the scenes, Israel’s intelligence agency works closely with Western nations against joint threats, Shimron said. So though foreign governments might lodge public complaints, he said, “when the door closes, they’ll wink.”

Consequences of Drone Strikes by Sajjad Shaukat (KashmirWatch)

In recent weeks CIA-operated drone strikes have increased on Pakistan’s tribal areas, resulting in more civilian casualties than the targeted militants. Besides a perennial wave of these attacks, in one of the atrocious strikes, 18 missiles by the US eight spy planes killed 16 innocent people on February 2 at a village in North Waziristan raising the death toll to 31.
In the last three years, more than 800 innocent civilians, and only 20 Al-Qaeda commanders including top militant leader Baitullah Mehsud had been killed by these unmanned air vehicles, while death of Hakimullah Mehsud has also been confirmed by the US special envoy Richard Holbrooke. 
Despite the protest of Pakistan’s civil and military leadership, and assurance of some US high officials, especially Richard Holbrooke so as to stop these drone attacks, this campaign has intensified under the Obama Administration. In this regard, the US defence budget for 2011 seeks more funds to enhance drone operations by 75 per cent. Chairman of the US JCS Admiral Mike Mullen stated that with this funding, we would increase the attacks by the unmanned Predators. 
Islamabad has repeatedly said that strikes by the pilotless aircraft are likely to affect war against terrorism in the country, particularly the ongoing military operations which also include the most volatile tribal area of South Waziristan, but American policy makers do not bother for any internal backlash.  
Notably, on January 22, 2010, The New York Times indicated: “the C.I.A. is expected to double its fleet of the latest Reaper aircraft – bigger, faster and more heavily armed than the present Predators…by extending these strikes to Balochistan.” The Times also realized that the drones undermined the larger war effort. 
Nevertheless, a continued wave of drone strikes in the tribal areas and prospective attacks on Balochistan will bring about dire consequences for Pakistan and the US itself.
First of all, attacks by US spy planes are likely to sabotage successes achieved by the ongoing military operations in Swat, Buner and Dir where pocket, particularly in South Waziristan where these military actions have commenced in the recent. At this critical juncture, when Pakistan has been facing a perennial wave of suicide attacks, the drone strikes are causing panic among the dwellers. Inclusion of Balochistan will further deteriorate the situation due to internal backlash in whole of Pakistan, resulting in public protests-moderates will join the radicals. Such a blunder will further organise and increase the number of Pakistani Taliban as majority of the Pakhtoons are likely to join them. However, in that scenario, suicide attacks are likely to increase in our country. While resentment against America could be judged from the fact that in the recent weeks, two US drones were shot down by the tribesmen.
More significantly, air strikes in Balochistan will lead to sustained Taliban attacks on the NATO supply lines through the Chaman border in Balochistan province, while until now, attacks have mostly focused on the northern route running through the NWFP. 
Besides, by playing a double game with Islamabad, under the pretext of Talibanisation and lawlessness, America may also demand to send NATO troops in Pakistan, alleging that nuclear weapons are not safe there. In that situation, even our armed forces will be compelled to stop military operations, while the democratic regime will be forced to leave the US war against terrorism.  
In the recent past, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Quereshi has pointed out that trust deficit exists” in Pak-US ties, while Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff Gen. Ashfaq Kayani stated on February 3 that Pakistan and the US had “different long term goal” in Afghanistan. Recently, during the NATO meeting at Brussels Kayani also indicated internal backlash, raising Islmabad’s concerns over drone strikes.  
Nevertheless, a continued wave of missile attacks on FATA and Balochistan will certainly result in more unity among the elected government, security forces and the general masses, consequently massive hostility towards Americans. In that situation, the US policy of liberalism and democracy could badly fail, giving a greater incentive to the fundamentalist and extremist elements in our country. 
If Washington isolates Pakistan through sanctions, such an act will also cause drastic impact on the US war against terrorism, not only in our country but also in Afghanistan where US-led NATO forces are already facing defeatism, damaging their regional and global interests. This action is likely to undermine international efforts of stability both in Afghanistan and Pakistan.  
It is mentionable that France, Germany, Canada and Australia are reluctant to maintain their troops in Afghanistan for a long time because of casualties and insecurity, while Holland has announced to withdraw its forces this year. Frustrated in Afghanistan – in case of targeting Pakistan’s regions beyond Waziristan, most of the American allies could leave the US war on terror, and leading to a greater rift between the US and other NATO members. 
America must realise that in case of widening the course of drone strikes coupled with any full-fledged NATO military action on our soil, both Iran and Pakistan might stand together to frustrate the US strategic designs. Moreover, their alliance with Syria would make the matter worse for Washington. In that scenario, a vast region from Pakistan to Somalia will further be radicalized, bringing about more terrorism against the Americans. However, in these adverse circumstances, American worldwide interests are likely to be jeopardised in these countries including whole of the Middle East where the US has already failed in coping with the Islamic militants directly or indirectly. 
These negative developments will further reduce the US bargaining leverage on hostile small countries. In this context, determination of Iran and North Korea to continue their nuclear programme, Syrian stand for Palestinian cause and refusal of the Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez to yield to the US pressure in relation to oil supply might be cited as an example.  
After fighting a different war for more than eight years, American cost of war which has already reached approximately 6 trillion dollars will further increase – decline of dollar and acute recession inside the country are likely to give a greater blow to the US economy vis-á-vis other developed countries. Intensity of these problems will lead the United States towards downfall. In this context, disintegration of the British Empire and the former Soviet Union offers a drastic lesson to Washington. Now, either by continuing its drone strikes or by including Balochistan in its strategy, America is likely to face the same fate.
(*) 
Sajjad Shaukat writes on international affairs and is author of the book: US vs Islamic Militants, Invisible Balance of Power: Dangerous Shift in International Relations.



UN Official Ali Treki Is on EU Travel Ban List of Libyans, UN Sources Tell Inner City Press, Swiss Silence 
By Matthew Russell Lee, Exclusive (InnerCityPress)
As Libya moved to deny visas to citizens of 25 European countries due to what it calls their ban on travel by 180 prominent Libyans, Inner City Press has been told
 at the UN that the Libyan President of the General Assembly, Ali Treki, is on the travel ban list. 
One member of Treki’s office at the UN said he is on the list, and that is why in his trans-Atlantic trip he visited only the UK, which is not a part of the EU’s Schengen passport agreement. Another member claimed that, despite the list, Switzerland had provided assurance that Treki could visit Geneva, since he is president of the UN General Assembly. 
Swiss diplomats at the UN have been non-transparent. The mission’s spokesman forwarded Inner City Press’ request for confirmation or denial to two officials in Geneva, saying he is on the way to Burundi. One of these officials has an “out of office” auto-responder on; the other has not replied. Nor has Ambassador Peter Maurer, chairman of the GA’s budget committee under Treki’s presidency. 
All of Inner City Press’ inquiries said the questions were on deadline, and Inner City Press has waited more than 48 hours. 
The dispute began when Switzerland arrested Libyan leader Gaddafi’s son Hannibal and his wife, for abusing his employees, though later all charges were dropped. Libya retaliated by locking up two Swiss businessmen. 
Libya says Switzerland prepared a list of Libyans to be barred from travel from all 25 members of the Schengen agreement. Italy has asked Switzerland to reconsider. 
Can a UN member state like Switzerland put the president of the UN general assembly on a travel ban list? Watch this site. 
Footnote: Inner City Press’ sources describe tensions between Treki and Libya’s Mission to the UN, which hired and controls many of the members of Treki’s staff. There are a number of festering problems in the PGAs office on which Inner City Press is showing restraint before reporting. For now, a simple update: long time UN Security officer Ralph Hering remains on suspension for a visit to the PGA’s office — and Treki’s daughter employed there — by a KFC Colonel Sanders impersonator….
Meanwhile: Iran seized a top Sunni militant on a flight from Dubai on Tuesday just 24 hours after claiming he was in Afghanistan at a US military base, in what it hailed as a “defeat” for its Western arch-foes.
The claim by Intelligence Minister Heydar Moslehi, who said Abdolmalek Rigi had been issued an Afghan passport by the “Americans,” travelled to Europe and met a NATO military chief in Afghanistan, was dismissed by Washington as “bogus.”


Kevin Rudd – The BUSH of the POMMS
Kevin Rudd says Australia faces major terror threat (BBC) 
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has warned that his country is now under a permanent and increased threat of militant attack.
He also announced plans to fingerprint and face-scan visitors from 10 high-risk countries. 
Mr Rudd said there was a growing threat from Islamist radicals born or raised in Australia. 
Last week, five Australians of foreign origin received heavy sentences for conspiring to launch a jihadist attack. 
Home grown
Mr Rudd said that many “home-grown terrorists” were inspired by what he called international jihadist narratives, as he released a new report compiled by intelligence agencies. 
“The threat of home-grown terrorism is now increasing,” he said. 
“This white paper is clear: some of the threat we now face comes from the Australian-born, Australian-educated and Australian residents.” 
Al-Qaida-linked groups in Yemen and Sudan are the new centre of threat internationally, the policy paper says, and the risks posed by Afghanistan and Pakistan remain high. 
The paper says that, despite Indonesia’s successes against terrorism, the Jakarta hotel attacks of last July point to an ongoing threat there. 
No escape
“Terrorism continues to pose a serious threat and a serious challenge to Australia’s security interests. That threat is not diminishing,” Mr Rudd said. 
“In fact, the government security intelligence agencies assess that terrorism has become a persistent and permanent feature of Australia’s security environment. These agencies warn that an attack could occur at any time.” 
Australia will spend A$69m ($62m; £40m) on new biometric facilities and will set up a national control centre to co-ordinate efforts to fight extremism. 
The government also plans to work with communities to stamp out radicalism by helping all ethnic groups integrate better with mainstream society. 
Last week five Australian citizens of Lebanese, Libyan and Bangladeshi origin were jailed for up to 28 years for gathering weapons in preparation for an attack on an unknown target. 
In August, five men with alleged links to Somalia’s al-Shabab militants were arrested and charged over an alleged plot to attack a Sydney military barracks. 
Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said about 40 people have been arrested in Australia on terror charges since 2000. “Whilst the numbers are small… it only takes one to get through,” he said, adding that the techniques used by home-grown militants were evolving. 
“We are now seeing emerging the potential so-called lone wolf escapade where we don’t have sophisticated planning but an individual is seduced by the international jihad and as a lone wolf does extreme things,” he told ABC radio. 
He said the 10 countries to face more stringent entry procedures would not be named yet. “There may be a diplomatic effort required in regards to some of those countries, as you would expect,” he said. 
Australia is a close ally of the United States. It was among the first to commit troops to US-led campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq. 
It has not suffered a major peacetime attack on home soil, but 95 Australians have been killed in militant bombings in neighbouring Indonesia since 2001.

Home-grown terror risk ‘overstated’ in AUSTRALIAN Government’s terrorism white paper, says expert Hugh White (AAP)

A LEADING security expert says the focus on the threat from home-grown terrorism in the government’s long-awaited counter-terrorism white paper is overstated.

In releasing the document yesterday, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd warned the threat from terrorism was “permanent” and “persistent”.
Mr Rudd said home-grown terrorism was also an increasing threat.
“Another apparent shift has been the increase in the threat from people born or raised in Australia, who have become influenced by the divisive narrative espoused by al-Qaeda,” Mr Rudd said.
But Professor Hugh White, a former deputy defence secretary and professor of strategic studies at the Australian National University, says the focus on home-grown terrorism appeared to be exaggerated.
“The white paper itself doesn’t talk about an increased threat, it talks about … a persistent and permanent threat,” Prof White told ABC Television last night. 
“I think the focus on home-grown terrorism in the white paper and in the government’s presentation of it is a little bit confected.”
Prof White said the document did not contain an analytical basis for the claim that the threat from home-grown terrorism had increased.
“We always knew that home-grown terrorism was a significant issue (but) I don’t see anything in the policy prescriptions in the document that indicate the government’s actually going to do much serious about it.”


Argentina rallies regional support over Falklands (BBC)

Latin American and Caribbean leaders have backed Argentina’s claim over the Falklands, Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has said.
At a regional summit in Cancun, Mexico, a document has reportedly been drafted giving Argentina unanimous support. 
It comes a day after a British oil rig began drilling for oil off the islands, a move Argentina formally objected to. 
The UK’s defence minister said the government would take whatever steps necessary to protect the Falklands. 
Argentina and Britain went to war over the South Atlantic islands in 1982, after Buenos Aires invaded the archipelago. 
The conflict ended with UK forces wresting back control of the islands, held by Britain since 1833. 
No official statement has been made in Cancun, but Mexican President Felipe Calderon reportedly said a document had been drawn up offering Buenos Aires full support in its territorial dispute with London. 
The Argentine president accused the British government of ignoring international law by allowing a British oil exploration company to begin drilling near the islands. 
She said: “I think the important thing is that we have achieved very strong support, something that legitimates our claims fundamentally against the new petroleum activity.” 
The BBC’s Andy Gallacher in Cancun says that any broad agreement at the summit could put more pressure on the British government in what has become an escalating diplomatic row. 
‘Return the Malvinas’
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez reiterated his support for Argentina. 
“We demand, and I think all of us should do the same, the withdrawal of the submarine platform, and that the English government… give that land back,” he said. 
Before leaving for the summit, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega called for “Britain to return the territory of the Malvinas to its real owners – to return it to Argentina” on Venezuelan Telesur television. 
Leaders at the summit, between the Rio Group and the Caribbean Community (Caricom), are also said to have discussed plans for a new pan-American alliance which would exclude Canada and the United States. 
The new grouping would serve as an alternative to the Organisation of American States, the main forum for regional affairs in the past 50 years. 
The British rig Ocean Guardian began drilling 100km (62 miles) north of the Falklands on Monday, despite fierce opposition from Argentina. 
Desire Petroleum, which is carrying out the drilling, said operations had started on the Liz 14/19-A exploration well at 1415 GMT. 
Argentina claims sovereignty over what it calls the Islas Malvinas and has imposed shipping restrictions. 
But UK Defence Minister Bill Rammell said the government had a “legitimate right” to build an oil industry in its waters. 
Mr Rammell said the UK would take “whatever steps necessary” to protect the islands and that it had made Argentina “aware of that”. 
Argentina has ruled out military action and is trying to pressure Britain into negotiations on sovereignty. 
During the seven-week war in 1982 over the Falklands, 649 Argentine and 255 British service personnel were killed. 
Last year Argentina submitted a claim to the United Nations for a vast expanse of ocean, based on research into the extent of the continental shelf, stretching to the Antarctic and including the island chains governed by the UK. 
It is due to raise the issue at the UN later this week.


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We do not send pictures with these reports, because of the volume, but picture this emetic scene with your inner eye:
A dying Somali child in the macerated arms of her mother besides their bombed shelter with Islamic graffiti looks at a fat trader, who discusses with a local militia chief and a UN representative at a harbour while USAID provided GM food from subsidised production is off-loaded by WFP into the hands of local “distributors” and dealers – and in the background a western warship and a foreign fishing trawler ply the waters of a once sovereign, prosper and proud nation, which was a role model for honesty and development in the Horn of Africa. (If you feel that this is overdrawn – talk to people who lived in Somalia in the 70s and 80s and come with us into Somalia and see the even more cruel reality today for yourself!) 
- and if you need lively stills or video material on Somalia, please do contact us.   

———–
 

There is no limit to what a person can do or how far one can go to help 
- if one doesn’t mind who gets the credit !

————-

ECOTERRA Intl. maintains a register for persons missing or abducted in the Somali seas (Foreign seafarers as well as Somalis). Inquiries by family member can be sent by e-mail to office[at]ecoterra-international.org

For families of presently captive seafarers – in order to advise and console their worries – ECOTERRA Intl. can establish contacts with professional seafarers, who had been abducted in Somalia, and their wives as well as of a Captain of a sea-jacked and released ship, who agreed to be addressed ”with questions, and we will answer truthfully”.

———–

ECOTERRA – ALERTS and pending issues: 

PIRATE ATTACK GULF OF ADEN: Advice on Who to Contact and What to Do www.noonsite.com/Members/sue/R2008-09-08-2
Best Managment Practice for the Gulf of Aden and off Somalia. 
In an effort to counter Piracy in the Gulf of Aden and off the east coast of Somalia industry bodies including the International Maritime Bureau have published the Best Managment Practice (BMP) guidelines. Please click here to download a copy of the BMP as pdf.

Especially YACHT-sailors should download, read and implement the I
SAF Guidelines

NATURAL RESOURCES & ARMED FISH POACHERSForeign navies entering the 200nm EEZ of Somalia and foreign helicopters and troops must respect the fact that especially all wildlife is protected by Somali national as well as by international laws and that the protection of the marine resources of Somalia from illegally fishing foreign vessels should be an integral part of the anti-piracy operations. Likewise the navies must adhere to international standards and not pollute the coastal waters with oil, ballast water or waste from their own ships but help Somalia to fight against any dumping of any waste (incl. diluted, toxic or nuclear waste). So far and though the AU as well as the UN has called since long on other nations to respect the 200 nm EEZ, only now the two countries (Spain and France) to which the most notorious vessels and fleets are linked have come up with a declaration that they will respect the 200 nm EEZ of Somalia but so far not any of the navies operating in the area pledged to stand against illegal fishing. On a worldwide scale, illegal fishing robs some 10 billion Euros every year mainly from poor countries, according to the European Commission. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) estimates that 18 percent of Indian Ocean catches are caught illegally, while ECOTERRA’s estimates speak of at least 30-40 %. While the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC) has no means whatsoever to control the fish looting, even the new EU regulations do not prevent the two most obvious circumventions: Fish from a registered and licensed vessel is transhipped on the high seas to an illegal vessel – often already a mother-ship with an industrial processing plant – in exchange for good payment and thereby exceeding the quota of the registered vessel several times before the “legal” vessel sails back into port with its own storage full. In the inverse of this criminal technique, called “fish laundering”, an illegal vessel – often even using banned fishing methods or ripping its catch from poorly protected fishing zones – “transships” for little money its cargo to a legal one, which, equipped with all the necessary authorisations, delivers the fish into the legal market chain – without having to spend a single dollar or minute on real fishing activities and therefore often only has cheap fun-crews, which even wouldn’t know how to catch the highly migratory tuna. Since flags under which all these vessels fly can be changed overnight and via the internet and the real beneficial ownership is hidden behind a mesh of cover-companies, the legal eagles, who try to follow up usually are blindfolded and rarely can catch up with the culprits managing these schemes. So far not a single illegal fishing vessel has been detained by the naval forces around the Horn of Africa, though they had been even informed about several actual cases, where an intervention would have been possible. Illegally operating Tuna fishing vessels (many from Taiwan and South Korea, some from Greece and China) carry now armed personnel and force their way into the Somali fishing grounds – uncontrolled or even protected by the naval forces mandated to guard the Somali waters against any criminal activity, which included arms carried by foreign fishing vessels in Somali waters.

LLWs / NLWs: According to recently leaked information the anti-piracy operations in the Gulf of Aden are also used as a cover-up for the live testing of recently developed arsenals of so called non-lethal as well as sub-lethal weapons systems. (Pls request details) Neither the Navies nor the UN has come up with any code of conduct in this respect, while the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Program (JNLWP) is sponsoring several service-led acquisition programs, including the VLAD, Joint Integration Program, and Improved Flash Bang Grenade. Alredy in use in Somalia are so called Non-lethal optical distractors, which are visible laser devices that have reversible optical effects. These types of non-blinding laser devices use highly directional optical energy. Somalia is also a testing ground for the further developments of the Active Denial System (ADS) Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration (ACTD). If new developments using millimeter wave sources that will help minimize the size, weight, and system cost of an effective Active Denial System which provides “ADS-ACTD-like” repel effects, are used has not yet been revealed. Obviously not only the US is developing and using these kind of weapons as the case of MV MARATHON showed, where a Spanish naval vessel was using optical lasers – the stand-off was then broken by the killing of one of the hostage seafarers. Local observers also claim that HEMI devices, producing Human Electro-Muscular Incapacitation (HEMI) Bioeffects, have been used in the Gulf of Aden against Somalis. Exposure to HEMI devices, which can be understood as a stun-gun shot at an individual over a larger distance, causes muscle contractions that temporarily disable an individual. Research efforts are under way to develop a longer-duration of this effect than is currently available. The live tests are apparently done without that science understands yet the effects of HEMI electrical waveforms on a human body.

WARBOTS, UAVs etc.: Peter Singer says: “By cutting the already tenuous link between the public and its nation’s foreign policy, pain- free war would pervert the whole idea of the democratic process and citizenship as they relate to war. When a citizenry has no sense of sacrifice or even the prospect of sacrifice, the decision to go to war becomes just like any other policy decision, weighed by the same calculus used to determine whether to raise bridge tolls. Instead of widespread engagement and debate over the most important decision a government can make, you get popular indifference. When technology turns war into something merely to be watched, and not weighed with great seriousness, the checks and balances that undergird democracy go by the wayside. This could well mean the end of any idea of democratic peace that supposedly sets our foreign-policy decision ­making apart. Such wars without costs could even undermine the morality of “good” wars. When a nation decides to go to war, it is not just deciding to break stuff in some foreign land. As one philosopher put it, the very decision is “a reflection of the moral character of the community who decides.” Without public debate and support and without risking troops, the decision to go to war becomes the act of a nation that doesn’t give a damn.” 

———— 

ECOTERRA Intl., whose work does focus on nature- and human-rights-protection and  – as the last international environmental organization still working in Somalia – had alerted ship-owners since 1992, many of whom were fishing illegally in the since 1972 established 200 nm territorial waters of Somalia and today’s 200nm Exclusive Economic Zone (UNCLOS) of Somalia, to stay away from Somali waters. The non-governmental organization had requested the international community many times for help to protect the coastal waters of the war-torn state from all exploiters, but now lawlessness has seriously increased and gone out of hand – even with the navies. 

ECOTERRA members with marine and maritime expertise, joined by it’s ECOP-marine group, are closely and continuously monitoring and advising on the Somali situation (for previous information concerning the topics please google keywords ECOTERRA (and) SOMALIA)

—————-

The network of ECOTERRA Intl. and the SEAFARERS ASSISTANCE PROGRAMME helped significantly in most sea-jack cases. Basically the East African Seafarers Assistance Programme tackles all issues of seafarers welfare and ECOTERRA Intl. is working in Somalia since 1986 on human-rights and nature protection, while ECOP-marineconcentrates on illegal fishing and the protection of the marine ecosystems. Your support counts too. 

Getting what you want is not nearly as important as giving what you have. – Tom Krause    
We give all – and You? Please consider to contribute to the work of  SAP, ECOP-marine and ECOTERRA Intl. Please donate to the defence fund. Contact us for details concerning project-sponsorship or donations via e-mail: ecotrust[at]ecoterra.net 

Kindly note that all the information above is distributed under and is subject to a license under the Creative Commons Attribution. ECOTERRA, however, reserves the right to editorial changes. To view a copy of this licence, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/. The opinion of  individual authors, whose writings are provided here for strictly educational and informational purposes, does not necessarily reflect the views held by ECOTERRA Intl. unless endorsed. With each issue of the SMCM ECOTERRA Intl. tries to paint a timely picture containing the actual facts and often differing opinions of people from all walks of live concerning issues, which do have an impact on the Somali people, Somalia as a nation, the region and in many cases even the world.

Send your genuine articles, networked or confidential information please to: mailhub[at]ecoterra.net (anti-spam-verifier equipped).  We welcome the submission of articles for publication through the SMCM. 

Pls cite ECOTERRA Intl. - www.ecoterra-international.org as source (not necessarily as author) for onward publications, where no other source is quoted.

Press Contacts:

ECOP-marine
East-Africa
+254-714-747090
marine[at]ecop.info 
www.ecop.info

ECOTERRA Intl.
Nairobi Node
africanode[at]ecoterra.net
+254-733-633-733
+254-714-747-090
 

EA Seafarers Assistance Programme
Mshenga Mwacharo (Information Officer)
+254-721-513 418 or +254-734-010 056
sap[at]ecoterra.net

SAP / ECOTERRA Intl. 
Athman Seif (Media Officer)
+254-722-613858
office[at]ecoterra-international.org

N.B.: If you are missing certain editions of our updates, this can have two reasons: Either you have not white-listed our sender address office[at}ecoterra-international.org for your inbox and your server provides for censorship (beware of aol or yahoo as mailservice and barracudacentral as filter - it shows only that you want to remain dumb folded) or you do not belong [yet] to our trusted friends and supporters, who receive all updates including those with classified content. Join the network or become a funding supporter to get them all. Look up earlier public updates on the internet – e.g. at: australia.to/2010/  or go to   
australia.to/2010/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=70&Itemid=142
The many thousand mails which have to go out with each update demand a structured mailing. If you require to receive the updates with the first bunch that is sent out, please request to be placed on the priority list.

Note: ECOTERRA is not responsible for the spam that sometimes appears to come from our domains. This is spoofed mail, is part of a systematic, ongoing harassment targeting many independent groups and websites. 90% of spam is sent not by people but systems, which are part of a scheme to restrict the internet. For more information see this article in The Nation or this article in Wired News. 

To subscribe to or unsubscribe from this listserve – just send a mail with reference SMCM to office[at]ecoterra-international.org

One tree makes approx. 16.67 reams of  copy/printing paper or 8,333.3 A4 sheets. 
Kindly print this email only if strictly necessary 
 
A Voice from the Truth- & Justice-Seekers, who have to stand tall between all the chairs, because they are not part of organized white-collar or no-collar-crime in Somalia or elsewhere, and who neither benefit from global naval militarization, from the illegal fishing and dumping in Somali waters or the piracy of merchant vessels, nor from the booming insurance business or the exorbitant ransom-, risk-management- or security industry, while neither the protection of the sea, the development of fishing communities or the humanitarian assistance to abducted seafarers and their families is receiving the required adequate attention, care and funding.

- standing against mercantilism, sensationalism and venality as well as banality in the media - 

 “During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.” George Orwell 
The right to know the truth ought to be universal. Tom Paine warned that if the majority of the people were denied the truth and ideas of truth, it was time to storm what he called the “Bastille of words”. That time is now.” 
 
EA ILLEGAL FISHING AND DUMPING HOTLINE:  +254-714-747090 (confidentiality guaranteed) – email:  somalia[at]ecoterra.net
EA Seafarers Assistance Programme EMERGENCY HELPLINES : Call: +254-437878, SMS to +254-738-497979 or sms/call +254-733-633-733 or +254-714-747090
 

 ”The pirates must not be allowed to destroy our dream !” 
Cpt. Florent Lemaçon - F/Y Tanit – killed by French commandos – 10. April 2009 / Ras Hafun 
NON A LA GUERRE – YES FOR PEACE
(Inscription on the sail of S/Y TANIT – shot down on day one of the French assault)


We have the obligation to fight oppression and cruelty wherever it appears, and believe that anybody who is degrading other people and peoples has to be fought against with whatever appropriate tools people have available.


CLEARING-HOUSE:
 Cut out the clutter – focus on facts !
(If you find this compilation too large or if you can’t grasp the multitude and magnitude of important, inter-related and complex issues influencing the Horn of Africa – you better do not deal with Somalia or other man-made “conflict zones”. We try to make it as easy and condensed as necessary.)



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