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Feb16
Piracy trials possilbe after new deal is struck
Filed under: World; Tagged as: africa, breaking news, firepower, gulf of aden, hijack, Military, navy, oil, piracy, pirates, saudi arabia, united states, warships, washingtonU.S. to open a test case that allows prosecution in Kenya courts of 16 suspects arrested in the Gulf of Aden
ABOARD THE U.S.S. VELLA GULF — American warships have caught more than a dozen suspected pirates here in the Gulf of Aden in the past week, testing a unique legal arrangement between the U.S. and Kenya that officials hope will result in trials, jail time and, eventually, fewer pirates.Naval officials have long said they can’t stop piracy with ships alone, and maritime lawyers believed jurisdiction questions made bringing pirates to justice difficult.
But starting last year, governments around the globe deployed forces here anyway, as attacks soared and threatened one of the world’s most important sea lanes. In September, hijackers seized a cargo ship loaded with tanks bound for Kenya. In November, they captured a fully laden Saudi Arabian oil tanker. Both vessels were released earlier this year after ransoms were paid.
Last month, Washington created a special task force dedicated to fighting pirates. Britain, Denmark, Turkey and Singapore joined in, U.S. officials said. The European Union has its own naval task force, and Chinese and Russian navies are providing escorts for their national shipping interests in the region.
All the firepower is resulting in thwarted attacks. On Wednesday, hijackers in small boats sped alongside a merchant ship and slapped a ladder against its hull. Helicopters and small boats attached to a U.S. guided-missile cruiser swooped in, surrounding the skiffs and apprehending the crew.
Early the next morning, an American destroyer sped to the rescue of an Indian-flagged merchant ship trying to outrun a pursuing speedboat. American ships apprehended nine alleged attackers in that engagement. On Friday, a Russian ship nabbed three more skiffs full of suspected pirates.
But catching pirates is just half the battle. International law makes piracy a crime, but nations have struggled to figure out where to send suspects and how to gather evidence in cases that occurred in international waters. In September, a Danish ship captured 10 alleged pirates, but ended up simply landing them back onshore in Somalia.
To back up the military firepower, the U.S. and Britain recently signed legal agreements with Kenya. As part of the deals — essentially extradition treaties for the high seas — Kenya has agreed to try suspected pirates plucked from the Gulf of Aden.
The 16 men captured last week are expected to be transferred to Kenya in coming weeks. They will be the agreement’s first test case.
Wary of becoming a dumping ground for suspected pirates, Kenya has so far agreed to take only a limited number of cases. The government has provided the Navy a checklist of evidence required to prosecute, U.S. officials said. A Kenyan government spokesman didn’t respond to repeated phone calls.“The big holdup was finding someone who would prosecute international piracy,” said Coast Guard Lt. Greg Ponzi, a law-enforcement officer who usually is pursuing drug runners in U.S. waters.
U.S. Navy officials initially were reluctant to enter the fray here. Without fundamental improvements in largely ungoverned Somalia, pirate havens there would continue to flourish, they said. Officers also said the size of the Gulf of Aden and surrounding waters made it impossible to respond in time to every attack.
Now, flush with some initial success, commanders appear more optimistic that they can make a difference. “The task force won’t be the final answer but it’s one of the key things,” said Rear Adm. Terrence McKnight, the U.S. task force commander. “It’s going to take a lot of time and hard work before we solve it, but … I think we’ve made significant headway.”
The task force made its first catch Wednesday afternoon.
The Vella Gulf picked up a distress call from a merchant ship. It dispatched a helicopter and chased down the skiff. At 3:30 a.m. on Thursday, a second distress call came in on an open, international radio channel. Navy Ensign Ian Townsend was standing watch on the bridge of the destroyer U.S.S. Mahan. The call came from the Premdivya, an Indian-flagged merchant vessel. The captain reported the skiff was shooting at the ship and was gaining fast.
The Mahan was about 17 kilometers away. As the warship closed in, the pirates abruptly sped off into the night.While the relieved crew of the Premdivya crew continued its voyage, the Vella Gulf, a guided-missile cruiser, sprang into action. With the new legal agreement in place but untested, the ship’s commander, Capt. Mark Genung, said he was eager to capture the pirates and gather evidence for “an iron-clad case.”
The Vella Gulf was an hour or more steaming from the Premdivya, so it launched a helicopter from its deck to scan for the fleeing boat in the moonlight. Just as the chopper was about to head back, Petty Officer Second Class Jason Fariss saw a speck flickering on the helicopter’s radar screen.
They sighted the skiff as dawn broke. The Mahan launched an unmanned aerial drone to take footage of the boat, capturing images of a large ladder.
The helicopter crew fired warning shots across the bow, and the suspects cut their motor. They also started dumping objects, including the ladder, over the side, according to members of the helicopter crew.
The three American task-force ships converged and launched dinghies. Americans searched the boat and the crew, and then motored them in pairs back to the Vella Gulf.
Keith Allen, a Mississippi-born federal investigator, then sped out from the ship to inspect the skiff and help gather evidence. The 10-year veteran detective found weapons: a rocket-propelled grenade, three rusty AK-47s, two heavier guns, a semi-automatic pistol, and a stash of ammunition and spent shell casings.
No CommentsFeb5Yemen on high alert amid fears of al Qaeda attack
Filed under: World; Tagged as: al qaida, american, news, saudi arabia, terrorism, terrorist, war, world news, yemenWASHINGTON (CNN) — Over the last several weeks a growing number of al Qaeda operatives have entered Yemen from Saudi Arabia and have established a renewed network that potentially threatens U.S. and Saudi targets in the region, both U.S. and Yemeni officials have told CNN.
Yemeni soldiers carry the coffin of a comrade killed in September’s attack on the U.S. Embassy.
As a result Yemeni security forces have gone on high alert.
CNN spoke with three U.S. officials and a Yemeni embassy official who outlined new concerns about al Qaeda in Yemen that all three said go beyond the usual worries about the terror organization in Yemen. None of the officials could be identified by name because of the sensitivity of the information.
“There are strong indications of heightened activity in Yemen,” one U.S. official told CNN. “There is real concern in the U.S. government that al Qaeda is trying to mount attacks in Yemen.”
The United States continues to worry about attacks against the U.S. embassy or other U.S. business interests in Yemen the official said. But there are also growing concerns that a renewed al Qaeda network in Yemen could plan attacks against Saudi oil infrastructure or the massive cargo shipping operations that run through the immediate region — potentially disrupting an already shaky world economy.
The official said there is a flow of intelligence information in recent weeks backing up that assessment. “There are clear indications al Qaeda is placing emphasis on Yemen as a place to conduct operations and train operatives.”
Both U.S. officials said one of the major concerns is that a number of al Qaeda operatives have crossed the border from Saudi Arabia since a Saudi crackdown has stepped up. Al Qaeda, he said appears to be looking for a new place in the immediate area where it can still operate.
The officials could not say how many have operatives may have crossed but the second U.S. official said the United States has been watching closely and is seeing ‘gatherings’ of al Qaeda operatives and communication among them. There have also been signs of communication between al Qaeda in Yemen and the al Qaeda leadership believed to be hiding in Pakistan, the first official said.
For its part, 1,000 troops from the Yemeni border guard were put on high alert last week, according to a Yemeni embassy official. “Additional guard have been mobilized to prevent the movement of wanted elements from and to the Yemeni-Saudi border, ” the official said. More than 30 people have already been arrested, he said, and the government of Yemen is developing a new list of “most wanted” fugitives that will be distributed throughout the country.
The Yemenis have been anxious to demonstrate to Washington they are serious about cracking down on al Qaida but the weak central government remains cautious about pressing its tribal leaders.
The U.S. officials said the latest concerns about Yemen are not directly related to the emergence of Said Ali al-Shiri as the new deputy leader of Al Qaeda in Yemen. Al-Shiri was released from U.S. custody in Guantanamo Bay but is now back in Yemen. All of this comes as Saudi Arabia has publicly released a list of 85 terrorists suspects — some of whom are suspected of being in Yemen already.
The U.S. State Department has long warned American citizens about the security risk of traveling to Yemen. Last year armed gunmen attacked the U.S. embassy killing 10 Yemeni police and civilians.
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