Chat with the IMB Director on annual global piracy report
Pottengal Mukundan, director of the International Maritime Bureau discuss the latest findings from the IMB annual global piracy report
Read morePottengal Mukundan, director of the International Maritime Bureau discuss the latest findings from the IMB annual global piracy report
Read moreMerchant navy captain Sunil James may have returned home after five-and-a-half-months in Togo but International Chamber of Commerce's International Maritime Bureau (London) statistics show how waters around the Indian sub-continent are the most dangerous.
Read moreICC International Maritime Bureau (IMB) has posted on its website updated data regarding the piracy and armed robbery figures a
Read morePirates attack oil tanker off Malaysia
Read moreNautilus International says Good News on Drop in Piracy but No Room for Complacency
Read moreIMB Piracy Reporting Centre provides Updated Piracy and Armed Robber Figures
Read moreAccording to IMB piracy report for period January- September 2013 The International Chamber of Commerce's International Maritime Bureau (IMB) has revealed that piracy on the world's seas is at its lowest third-quarter level since 2006, but warns of the threat of continuing violent attacks off the East and West coasts of Africa.The latest IMB Piracy Report, published today, shows 188 piracy incidents in the first nine months of 2013, down from 233 for the same period last year. Hostage-taking has also fallen markedly, with 266 people taken hostage this year, compared with 458 in the first three quarters of 2012.In the first nine months of 2013, IMB's global figures show pirates hijacked 10 vessels, fired at 17, and boarded 140. A further 21 attacks were thwarted. In total 266 crew were taken hostage and 34 kidnapped. One seafarer was killed, twenty were injured, and one is reported missing.IMB Director Pottengal Mukundan urged caution: "Although the number of attacks is down overall, the threat of attacks remains, particularly in the waters off Somalia and in the Gulf of Guinea. It is vital that ship masters continue to be vigilant as they transit these waters."Attacks in seas around Somalia continued to fall ...
Read moreThe pirates stole the ship's cargo, crew personal belongings and cash
Read moreAccording to the International Maritime Bureau, the waters near Johor and Malacca are now surpassing Somalia as the top piracy hotbed. It attributed this to the rise in piracy off Indonesia's Tanjung Priok, Dumai, Belawan, Taboneo and Muara Jawa - where the waters have been marked as hot spots.
Read moreWeather conditions help small pirate skiffs operation As the monsoon in the NW Indian Ocean begins to subside and the weather once again becomes conducive to the operation of small pirate skiffs, the ICC International Maritime Bureau (IMB) has urged Masters not to be complacent as they transit the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Aden.It has called for vessels to remain alert and apply the Best Management Practices (BMP), including its reporting requirements, as it transits the area.Overall this year the attacks have fallen to 10, a trend which is attributed to the vital action of the naval vessels engaged in anti-piracy operations, compliance with the BMP and the use of professional security teams on board.Ashore in Somalia, the government in Mogadishu which has been in power for the last 12 months has provided a stabilising influence which has been missing for decades."Naval forces continue to play a key role in the response against piracy in this area from the collection of intelligence to the identification and disarming of suspected pirate vessels before they pose a threat to ships. It is vital that they remain until the situation improves ashore so that piracy is no longer a viable option ...
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