EU studying links between
Italian mafia and Somalian pirates .
EUobserver.com
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
The EU special envoy for Somalia is looking into a fresh report
that pirates are in business with Italian gangsters on toxic
waste.
The Paris-based criminologist, Michel Koutouzis,
who carries out investigations for the UN and for EU institutions,
described the problem in a new book - Crime, Trafficking and
Networks - published in May.
He said organised crime groups in south Italy
- the Camorra, 'Ndranghetta and La Sacra Corona Unita - supply
Somalian warlords with black market small arms from the Western
Balkans in return for permission to dump waste.
"Tonnes of waste are discharged every year
off the coasts of Somalia, Sudan and Eritrea under the noses
of countless warships which control sea freight in the Read
Sea and the Gulf of Aden," he explained.
He noted that part of the income - worth "hundreds
of millions of euros a year" - is laundered via the tourist
industry in Kenya and Tanzania.
He added the practice has been going on for years:
a UN report in 2005 said the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami broke
up deposits of lead, cadmium and mercury as well as hospital
and chemical waste, which washed up on the shore near the coastal
towns of Hobbio and Benadir, killing some 300 people.
Speaking to press in Brussels on Tuesday (19 June),
the EU's special envoy for the Horn of Africa, Alexander Rondos,
a former Greek diplomat, said the book has come to his attention.
"It has been passed on to people who are
better equipped than I am to look into it ... people are checking
into it," he said.
"We need to find out who is funding them
[Somalian privateers]. They are part of a much bigger problem
we face in the Indian Ocean - the globalisation of organised
crime. Investigations are under way."
British rear admiral Duncan L. Potts, who commands
the EU's anti-piracy mission, Atalanta, said a new Regional
Anti-Piracy Prosecution and Intelligence Co-ordination Centre
- which aims to target pirate's financial activities - is "getting
off the ground" in the Seychelles.
He added that he has no hard evidence of the Italian
link, however.
For his part, Koutouzis, in an interview in his
home in Paris last Friday, told this website: "Of course
they know about it. But they don't want to do anything."
Potts noted that Atalanta seems to have turned
a corner in terms of stopping attacks.
Pirates seized 28 vessels in the first half of
2011, but just three in the second half of last year and five
so far this year.
Seven vessels and over 200 passengers and crew
are currently being held for ransom. Some of them have been
held for more than 18 months in "awful conditions"
and are in bad health.
Potts attributed the turnaround in part to an
"exponential" increase in the use of private security
firms by commercial shipping: more than half the 50,000-or-so
vessels which pass through the region each year have their own
guards.
Their activities are regulated under the laws
of the country where the ship is registered, in many cases Liberia
or Panama.
"At the more responsible end of the market
... they fire warning shots and then four or five targeted shots
to show that the ship is armed," he said.
He did not have figures on how many pirates have
been killed by private companies.
He added that Atalanta plays the role of a "constabulary"
rather than doing "warfighting" and that "to
his knowledge" the troops under his command have not killed
a single pirate in their three and half years of operations.