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  • 11
    May
    2013
    3:37pm, EDT

    After decades as 'world's most dangerous' place, has Somalia turned the corner?

    Tobin Jones / AMISOM via AFP - Getty Images

    A Somali dock worker carries cement unloaded from a ship to a waiting truck at Mogadishu's main port. The aid effort in the war-torn country is shifting toward boosting the economy amid claims it now has a "bright future."

    By Rohit Kachroo and Keir Simmons, NBC News

    Somalia has long been defined by terrorism, famine, and piracy.

    But as the United States this week pledged another $40 million towards its recovery, Somalia's leaders said the country had finally turned a corner in the fight against the al Qaeda-linked militant group, al-Shabab.

    “A bright future for Somalia is within touching distance,” Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon proclaimed on Twitter as the U.S. attended a global summit in London to discuss the country’s future.  

    Organizers of the conference sought to build upon the new normality creeping into the nation’s capital, Mogadishu. The country that is often referred to as "the world's most dangerous" is not as dangerous as it once was.

    Pirates have not successfully hijacked any ships off Somalia's coast in almost a year and a growing sense of security and confidence has been fueled by the relative retreat of al-Shabab, which controlled much of the country until Kenyan forces invaded in 2011.

    Somalia is a battleground not only for its own rival factions, but also for the U.S. and its allies in the fight against al Qaeda, which is opening up Africa as a new global front line.

    U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron said the international community should be careful to avoid Somalia becoming a hotbed for radicalism.

    "If we ignore it, we will be making the same mistakes in Somalia that we made in Afghanistan in the 1990s. I'm not prepared to let that happen," he told the summit on Tuesday. 

    To that end, the U.S. has pumped more than $1.5 billion worth of assistance into the country since 2009, including the $40 million pledged on Tuesday. It is among the countries pledging aid in the hope that stability will encourage security.

    The fall of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991 left Somalia without effective central government and awash with weapons.

    But there are signs of fragile progress. Airplanes flying in from neighboring Kenya are filled with members of the diaspora returning home after being forced out by hunger and civil war.

    Last year, Turkish Airlines decided to start a commercial service from Istanbul. Officials in Mogadishu hope that the city’s beaches might one day attract a significant number of tourists on those flights. 

    But Somalia’s renaissance has limits. Mogadishu is still considered too dangerous to host a meeting of world leaders and senior government officials.

    Although al-Shabab has been pushed to the outskirts of the capital by foreign peacekeepers, it maintains the ability to strike at its heart.

    Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP - Getty Images

    Security surround the area following a suicide attack on a government convoy in Mogadishu on May 5. Around 11 people were killed.

    It proved its deadly potential on April 14 when terrorists attacked Mogadishu’s courthouse. A deadly car bomb was detonated in the center of the city a month earlier. On Sunday, a suicide bomber rammed an explosives-laden car into a convoy carrying Qatari officials, killing at least eight Somalis.

    Ahmed Soliman, research assistant at British think tank Chatham House, believes such attacks will become more frequent as al-Shabab tries to disrupt areas it no longer controls.

    “Al-Shabab still controls the majority of rural and south-central areas of Somalia,” he said. “The shift toward insurgent attacks could be a sign of weakness – that it has been forced to change tactics and attack areas that it no longer dominates.  But I think it could also play a game of cat-and-mouse with foreign troops by trying to make gains in northern areas just as the troops establish control in south-central areas.”

    “It is being kept at bay by international forces under AMISOM [the African Union Mission in Somalia] but that will only last as long as those forces are there. Things are undoubtedly changing, but the jury is still out on whether al-Shabab has been defeated.”

    Abdulhakim Haji Faqi, Somalia's defense minister, said his country's forces desperately need military resources. 

    Abdulhakim Haji Faqi, Somalia's defense minister, discusses the threat posed by al-Shabab.

    "In order to win this war against al-Shabab, we need to get the proper equipment," he said. "We are not asking for air forces, we are not asking for ships, we are not asking for huge military equipment, we are asking only for light weapons and ammunition so that our soldiers can effectively fight."

    He added that this was an "international issue," not just a problem for Somalia as extremists from Pakistan, Yemen and Afghanistan -- as well as the U.S., Canada and Britain -- had been operating in the country.

    "International organizations based in Somalia are trying to attack neighboring countries in the region and are also trying to cause international problems elsewhere," he said. 

    Somalia’s fledgling U.N.-backed government, which took power in September after more than a decade of transitional rule, insists things are looking up – but admits the process will take time.

    “Somalia is a country that has been exposed to anarchy for over two decades,” President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud told the U.K.’s Sunday Telegraph newspaper in an interview ahead of the summit. “When I was elected I was attacked within two days, and there were suicide bombers in every corner of my hotel. There are threats against me all the time.”

    “There is a huge amount at stake in Somalia: the future of this country, the security of the region, the removal of the piracy stranglehold," he added.

    The sharp reduction in attacks on commercial ships off East Africa has been driven by a government amnesty for young pirates backed by international military patrols.

    Slideshow: Famine strikes East Africa

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Somali refugees are seeking shelter in Mogadishu and Kenya from extreme drought and hunger in what the UN's refugee agency is calling the worst humanitarian disaster in the world.

    Launch slideshow

    “As long as the international naval presence remains, piracy rates will stay low,” said Adjoa Anyimadu, research associate at Chatham House.  “It’s impressive how much countries have worked together to provide naval protection - China and Russia are among those working in the U.S.-led operation.”

    In another potential sign of recovery, Deputy U.N. Secretary-General Jan Eliasson wants to shift aid efforts away from away from humanitarian aid and toward development projects. The U.N. estimates Somalia will need $1.33 billion this year.

    The country still faces desperate poverty. More than 200,000 children under 5 are acutely malnourished, and just under half of Somalis live on less than $1 a day.

    Millions still live in refugee camps, and that country lacks government structures such as schools, hospitals and sanitation.

    "The main reason we have hope now, more than ever .... is we now have a leadership which has a sense of responsibility," Eliasson told Reuters on Tuesday.  "The trend is positive, but it has been interrupted, and it might still be interrupted by sporadic attacks of the nature we have seen. Al-Shabab are still a threat.”

    Al-Shabab is blamed not only for causing instability across the Horn of Africa, but for contributing to the famine that struck Somalia between 2010 and 2012. According to a report released last week by the U.S.-funded famine early warning system (FEWSNET) and the United Nations, more than a quarter of a million people died during the crisis.

    A peaceful solution to these problems is far from likely. Al-Shabab remains an attractive organization to many in country where youth unemployment is running at about 70 per cent. “Al-Shabab pays its fighters and gives them food,” Soliman noted.

    “Several of its commanders are high on the list of the U.S. government list of most wanted terrorists,” so direct peace talks are off the agenda, Soliman said. However, unofficial meetings with Somalia’s government are possible.

    There are also problems with the country’s own forces. In a report published Monday, Human Rights Watch said it had documented “serious abuses” by Somali security forces, including the army, police, intelligence agencies, and government-affiliated militia.

    “Abuses documented include murder, rape, torture, arbitrary arrest and detention, and looting,” the report said. “These abuses were committed with almost complete impunity.”

    However, Somalia’s president remains committed to the task ahead. “One thing is very clear…that Somalia is fragmented into pieces,” Mohamud said. “Reversing all that has been happening in the past two decades is a very tedious work that requires some time.”

    NBC News' Michele Neubert and Alastair Jamieson and Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

     

    • Fun in Mogadishu? Yes, it happens

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    205 comments

    After "Blackhawk Down" Mogadishu should have been leveled.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world, somalia, terror, africa, state-department, foreign-aid, al-qaeda, featured, mogadishu, al-shabab, rohit-kachroo
  • 2
    May
    2013
    2:37pm, EDT

    Aaargh! Ladies of English town misunderstand intent of pirate night

    SWNS.com

    Former Somali pirate hostage Colin Darch poses for a photograph with members of the Women's Institute in Parkham, England. The WI members had dressed as pirates for the evening not realizing their guest speaker's connection with the evening theme.

    By Peter Jeary, Senior Foreign Desk Editor, NBC News

    A women's group in southwest England had an embarrassing encounter at a recent meeting when members misinterpreted the idea behind a visiting speaker's talk about pirates.

    The Parkham Women's Institute, a venerable institution traditionally devoted to home-spun handicrafts and good works, decided to get into the spirit of Captain Colin Darch's talk by dressing in pirate garb. Neckerchiefs, eye patches and pirate hats were widely sported, with a toy parrot thrown in for good measure.

    Unfortunately, Captain Darch's topic focused on his 2008 ordeal at the hands of Somali pirates in the Indian Ocean, when he was held hostage for more than six weeks.

    According to The North Devon Journal newspaper, a report from the Women's Institute meeting said that after some initial embarrassment: "Everyone sat down to listen to Darch's story and what a story it was. Absolutely fascinating and gripping. If you ever get a chance to hear Colin speak grab the opportunity because he is a great raconteur and very humorous."

    The Women's Institute could not be reached for comment.

    The 75-year-old retired sea captain said he was initially not sure what was going on: "It felt strange to be talking to a group of ladies with blue rinses and rubber daggers," he said.

    "Then when it became clear that my talk on piracy was about my experiences, and not about piracy in general, they were obviously rather embarrassed."

    The sea dog's sense of humor clearly came to the rescue when he was asked to judge the best-dressed-pirate competition.

    "They asked me to judge them all on a scale of 0 to 10. However, I though it better to simply choose a winner. I chose the lady with the toy parrot – although, to be honest, it looked more like a fluffy chick."

    Darch was speaking to the Women's Institute to promote his book about his life and times on the high seas, including the 47 days he was held by pirates. He and his shipmates were eventually released after a ransom was paid.

    Despite the mix-up, Darch harbors no hard feelings and does not expect anyone to walk the plank.

    "They gave me such an enthusiastic welcome, it almost made cry," Darch said. "And I managed to sell a few books too, which was nice."

    107 comments

    I admire Mr. Darch for his gracious good humor. After what he went through, this was obviously small potatos to him. If he had been infected with the I'm insulted/entitllement fever we have today, then I would have been disappointed. (Compared to the airline breatpump story of a few days ago) Keep c …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: somalia, featured, england, pirates, north-devon, parkham-womens-institute
  • 27
    Mar
    2013
    7:27pm, EDT

    Eritrean man sentenced to nine years for aiding Somali terrorist group

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    An Eritrean man who joined Somali guerrillas was sentenced Wednesday in New York City to more than nine years in prison for assisting a U.S.-designated terrorist group, federal authorities said. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Mohamed Ibrahim Ahmed, 38, had been living in Sweden when he traveled to Somalia to join al-Shabaab militants in their war against the Somali government, according to court records.

    The State Department has formally designated al-Shabaab as a foreign terrorist organization.


    Ahmed was arrested in 2009 in Nigeria and sent to the U.S., where he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization and one count of conspiracy to receive military-type training from a foreign terrorist organization. 

    Court records show that Ahmed's unexpected guilty plea came shortly before U.S. District Judge Kevin Castel was about to rule on his motion to suppress information he gave FBI officials while he was in custody in Nigeria. 

    That motion had been seen as an important test of the Obama administration's contention that investigators can question terrorism suspects without reading them their Miranda rights against self-incrimination. 

    The FBI revealed in case records unsealed this month that it interviewed Ahmed twice in Nigeria — once without advising him of his rights and again after having done so. 

    In a reply to Ahmed's motion to suppress, the government argued that it could legally question terrorism suspects without advising them of their rights and without compromising a criminal investigation if doing so was "relevant to the national security of the United States."

    The second interrogation was conduced by different agents at a different location and was therefore "clean," it argued — a contention that civil liberties advocates have questioned.

    The judge's ruling on Ahmed's motion was never released.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    11 comments

    Nine years for helping terrorists? And maybe 20 for medical marijuana?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: somalia, featured, crime, terrorism, fbi
  • 18
    Mar
    2013
    8:36am, EDT

    Car bomb in Somalia kills at least 10

    GRAPHIC WARNING: Contains images which some viewers may find disturbing. 

    Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP - Getty Images

    A member of the Somali security forces flees the site of a car bomb in central Mogadishu, Somalia, on March 18, 2013.

    Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP - Getty Images

    A woman reacts near the site of a car bomb in central Mogadishu on March 18, 2013.

    Reuters reports — A car bomb exploded near the presidential palace in the Somali capital Mogadishu on Monday, killing at least 10 people in a blast that appeared to target senior government officials, police said.

    The suicide attacker detonated explosives while driving along a boulevard that runs between the palace and the national theatre, a route lined by tearooms that were engulfed in fire moments after the blast, senior police officer Abdiqadir Mohamud said. A public minibus driving along the road burst into flames.

    "The suicide car bomber targeted a senior national security officer whose car was passing near the theatre," Mohamud told Reuters. "Most of the people who died were on board the minibus - civilians. This public vehicle coincidentally came between the government car and the car bomb when it was hit." Read the full story.

    Feisal Omar / Reuters

    An injured man sits on the road near the presidential palace in Mogadishu on March 18, 2013.

    A car bomb explodes near the presidential palace in Mogadishu, Somalia, killing at least 10 people. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    7 comments

    Al-Queda

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  • 1
    Mar
    2013
    10:57am, EST

    Suicide bombers target pleasure-seekers on Mogadishu beach

    Feisal Omar / Reuters

    Somali soldiers inspect the scene of an explosion at a restaurant on Mogadishu's beachfront Friday.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A beach-front restaurant in Somali capital Mogadishu was hit by a twin suicide bomber attack Friday, an official and a witness said.

    The attack took place near the famous Lido beach, which is often crowded with people from the war-ravaged city playing soccer, swimming and simply having fun.

    “There was a big explosion from a car, then as people rushed towards the area after the blast, a suicide bomber with a vest exploded himself,” Mohammed Abdullahi, a businessman who was inside the restaurant when the attack took place, told the AFP news agency.

    Abdiqadir Mohamed, a senior police officer, gave a similar account of the attack to Reuters.

    Abdullahi told AFP that he saw two dead security guards and at least nine other people who were wounded. Reuters said one person was killed along with the two bombers. It was not immediately possible to confirm how many people died.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility, Reuters said, but it added that the al-Shabaab rebel group had vowed a campaign of guerrilla-style attacks against the new government, which is supported by Western powers and regional states.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Fun in Mogadishu? Yes, it happens

    35 comments

    The words 'Mogadishu' and 'pleasure-seekers' in the same headline... something I never expected to see.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: somalia, featured, suicide-bomber, mogadishu, al-shabaab, lido-beach
  • 28
    Feb
    2013
    10:17am, EST

    Young Somali pirates offered amnesty amid 'drastic' fall in attacks

    Farah Abdi Warsameh / AP file

    Masked pirate Hassan stands near a Taiwanese fishing vessel that washed up on shore near Hobyo, Somalia, after pirates were paid a ransom and released the crew in September 2012.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Somalia’s president has offered an amnesty to young pirates amid a "drastic" fall in the number of attacks off East Africa.

    In an interview with the AFP news agency Wednesday, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said that he wanted to offer an "alternative means of earning a living" to young Somalis caught up in the lucrative business of hijacking ships and yachts, then ransoming the passengers and crew.


    "We have been negotiating with the pirates indirectly through the elders," Mohamud said. "Piracy has to end."

    But he stressed the amnesty offer did not apply to senior pirates. “We are not giving them amnesty, the amnesty is for the boys,” he said

    Captain Pottengal Mukundan, director of the International Maritime Bureau, which monitors piracy, said Thursday that there had been a "very drastic decrease" in the number of attacks of East Africa.

    He said there had been just two attacks in the area so far this year, compared to 30 in January and February last year, a trend he described as "very, very positive."

    The two recent attacks were unsuccessful and suspects in both incidents were later apprehended by international naval forces that patrol the seas off the Horn of Africa.

    However, Mukundan stressed that "we cannot become complacent."

    "There’s still a very high possibility that, if the guard is let down, attacks will happen," he said.

    'Alternative jobs'
    He said the naval presence in the area was one of the main reasons behind the drop in attacks.

    Mukundan said pirates known to be guilty of attacks should be prosecuted, but added that an amnesty had worked well when it was tried in Nigeria in 2010.

    "A number of militants who also doubled up as pirates and robbers did law down their weapons and look for alternative jobs," he said.

    On Wednesday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said in a statement that five Somali men had been found guilty of "engaging in piracy and committing other offenses" in an attack on the USS Ashland on April 10, 2010.

    According to their defense, the men were returning home in a skiff after taking refugees from Somalia to Yemen. The lawyers said they needed help and an AK-47 was fired toward Ashland to get its attention. Ashland returned fire, killing one and setting the skiff on fire.

    "These men were pirates — plain and simple," U.S. Attorney Neil H. MacBride said in the statement. "They attacked a ship hoping to hold it ransom for millions of dollars. Few crimes are older than piracy on the high seas, and today’s verdict shows that the United States takes it very seriously."

    George Venizelos, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s New York Field Office, said the five men were "headed where they belong: to federal prison."

    "Let this send a clear message of deterrence to anyone who threatens those who traverse the high seas," he said.

    The five, who face life in prison, are due to be sentenced in July.

    Related:

    Somali pirate kingpin says he's giving up hijacking; UN skeptical

    World sea piracy falls to lowest level since 2008

    Hostages freed by Somali pirates after nearly 3 years in captivity


    80 comments

    Amnesty, Hell! Kill all the pirates! By the way, the fishing vessel would look cool in my back pasture -- except for the smell, I imagine.

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    Explore related topics: africa, somalia, featured, pirates, amnesty, hassan-sheikh-mohamud
  • 14
    Jan
    2013
    9:55am, EST

    Obama: US forces helped France in failed Somalia rescue attempt

    Al-Kataib Media / MAXPPP via EPA

    An undated TV grab of footage shot by Al-Kataib Media, made available by MAXPPP on Saturday, shows Denis Allex, a French hostage allegedly held by Somali militants, who was reportedly killed during a failed rescue mission by French soldiers.

    By Roberta Rampton, Reuters

    WASHINGTON -- The United States helped France last week during an attempted rescue of a secret agent captured by insurgents in Somalia, President Barack Obama confirmed on Sunday in a letter to Congress.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The French team was trying to free Denis Allex, held since 2009 by al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab, but insurgents apparently killed their hostage during the raid, along with a commando.


    The French defense ministry said that 17 Somali fighters also died in the fight.

    "United States combat aircraft briefly entered Somali airspace to support the rescue operation, if needed. These aircraft did not employ weapons during the operation," Obama said in his letter to U.S. lawmakers.

    Obama sent the letter to Congress to fulfill his obligations under the War Powers Resolution, which requires him to inform policymakers within 48 hours of committing armed forces to military action without congressional authorization.

    Obama said the operation was warranted to further U.S. national security interests, and said U.S. forces "took no direct part in the assault on the compound where it was believed the French citizen was being held hostage."

    Editing by Philip Barbara, Reuters

    Related stories:

    Officials: French agent held by al-Qaida group in Somalia killed in rescue attempt

    Somali troops take control of al-Shabab stronghold Kismayo

    D-Day for al-Qaida in Somalia? Troops storm beaches at last stronghold

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    27 comments

    Whatever happened to all of that Napalm we had left over from the Vietnam war? I can think of some great places to dispose of it.

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    Explore related topics: somalia, featured, united-states, france, rescue, raid, hostage, secret-agent
  • 12
    Jan
    2013
    6:09am, EST

    Officials: French agent held by al-Qaida group in Somalia killed in rescue attempt

    Al-Kataib Media / MAXPPP via EPA

    This undated TV grab of footage by Al-Kataib Media shows Denis Allex, a French agent held by Somali militants.

    By John Irish and Abdi Sheikh, Reuters

    Updated at 3:40 p.m. ET: PARIS/MOGADISHU - A French intelligence officer held hostage in Somalia since 2009 was killed along with at least one other soldier during a botched rescue attempt by French troops on Friday night, the French Defense Ministry said Saturday.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Commandos broke into where Allex was being detained last night and immediately faced strong resistance," Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told reporters.

    Another commando is missing.

    The deaths in Somalia coincided with the killing of a pilot in air strikes in Mali, however, striking a double blow to the start of a campaign that represents President Francois Hollande's biggest foreign policy test since his May election.

    Adding confusion to the fallout of the agent's rescue effort, the Harakat al-Shabab al-Mujahideen insurgent group holding Denis Allex said in a statement that he was still alive and being held at a location far from the base where French military helicopters attacked overnight.

    The insurgent group said that the injured French commando "is now in the custody of the mujahideen."

    "Several French soldiers were killed in the battle and many more were injured before they fled from the scene of battle, leaving behind some military paraphernalia and even one of their comrades on the ground," they said in the statement.

    French Army chief Admiral Edouard Guillaud did not confirm whether this was true: "If he is alive then he could be, but he could also be hiding," he told reporters.

    Both sides described a fierce firefight during the raid on the Horn of Africa country that France said was carried out by France's external intelligence agency for which Allex worked.

    A Somali official in Bula Mareer, about 75 miles south of Mogadishu, said French helicopters attacked overnight.

    "Helicopters attacked al Shabaab at 2.00 a.m. this morning. Two civilians died in the crossfire," said Ahmed Omar Mohamed, deputy chairman for lower Shabelle region.

    An al Shabaab official who asked not to be named said they exchanged fire with French commandos. "Three helicopters dropped French commandos. We exchanged fire," the official said.

    'Inhumane conditions'
    Allex was one of two officers from his intelligence agency kidnapped by al Shabaab in Mogadishu in July 2009. His colleague, Marc Aubriere, escaped a month later but Allex had been held ever since in what Paris called "inhumane conditions."

    The ministry said he was kidnapped while carrying out an aid mission with the Somali government. France has previously said the two men were in the Somali capital to train local forces.

    A video of Allex pleading with Hollande to negotiate his release and save his life appeared on a website in October used by Islamist militant groups around the world. Reuters could not verify its authenticity.

    Hollande said at the time the government was seeking to start talks with any party able to facilitate Allex's release.

    After his abduction, al Shabaab issued a series of demands, which included an end to French support for the Somali government and the withdrawal of African Union peacekeepers, whose 17,600-strong troops are helping battle the rebels.

    Under pressure from the peacekeeping troops and Somali government forces, al Shabaab has lost many of its major urban strongholds in south-central Somalia since it launched a rebellion against the Western-backed government in 2007.

    The rebels, who want to impose their strict interpretation of sharia, or Islamic law, across the Horn of Africa state, withdrew from the capital Mogadishu in August last year and lost their last major bastion of Kismayu six weeks ago.

    Read more coverage of Somalia from NBC News

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    83 comments

    You americans are funny, when the french refuse to fight an illegal war like iraq you bad mouth them, then when an african country ask for their help and they go help you bad mouth them.. Damn if they do, damn if they don't !

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    Explore related topics: somalia, featured, france, rescue, hostage, al-shabab, denis-allex
  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    6:42pm, EST

    Somali pirate kingpin says he's giving up hijacking; UN skeptical

    Mohamed Dahir / AFP - Getty Images file

    A January 2010 photo, shows a Somali pirate and the hijacked Greek cargo ship MV Filitsa, anchored just off Hobyo in northeastern Somalia.

    By Abdi Sheikh, Reuters

    MOGADISHU - A Somali pirate kingpin nicknamed "Big Mouth" says he has renounced a life of hijacking ships that earned him fame and fortune before an international naval crackdown that has curbed attacks on maritime commercial and pleasure craft.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    A U.N. Monitoring Group report on Somalia in 2010 said that Mohamed Abdi Hassan "Afweyne" commanded bandits in the Arabian Sea and off the Indian Ocean coast of East Africa for almost a decade, raking in millions of dollars in ransom payments.

    "I have given up piracy and succeeded in encouraging more youth to give up piracy," Afweyne told Reuters on Friday.

    "This came as a result of my efforts for a long period. The boys also took the decision like me. It was not due to fear from warships, it was just a decision," he said by mobile phone from his base in Adado in central Somalia.


    Security analysts saw Afweyne's gesture as symbolic, saying he had already grown rich off the proceeds of piracy and seemed to have decided it was no longer worth the increasing risk.

    "(Afweyne's move) may be a tacit recognition that the Somali piracy phenomenon no longer yields the lucrative criminal gains it did in previous years, thanks to successful naval operations and improved security and awareness on merchant vessels," said Rory Lamrock, intelligence analyst with security firm AKE.

    "(Pirates) are getting shot up or arrested by private security companies and navies so he (Afweyne) is finding it increasingly difficult to find recruits," said Alan Cole, head of the anti-piracy program at the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

    "As many as 1,500 young men have left home hoping to come back rich and not come home at all," Cole said from Nairobi, capital of Somalia's southern neighbor, Kenya.

    Naval patrols deter piracy
    In 2011, Somali piracy in the busy shipping lanes of the Gulf of Aden and the northwestern Indian Ocean netted $160 million, and cost the world economy some $7 billion, according to the American One Earth Future foundation.

    But successful hijackings have been declining steadily since 2010 thanks to concerted patrolling by an international coalition of warships and the increasing use of armed private security guards on merchant ships.

    Just seven ships were seized in the vast area of the Indian Ocean off Somalia in the first 11 months of last year, compared to 24 in the whole of 2011, after NATO, the European Union and other nations dispatched warships there.

    Adado regional President Mohamed Aden Tiicey said Afweyne had actually withdrawn from active piracy some years ago, and was behind the surrender of 120 pirates over the past week.

    "In 2010 our administration pardoned him and the then-interim government of Somalia also pardoned him and gave him a diplomatic passport," Tiicey said.

    The U.N. Monitoring Group said last year that pirate chieftains such as Afweyne were being protected by Somali authorities from arrest. It said it had evidence a diplomatic passport had been issued to Afweyne by then-Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed as a reward for what Somali officials said was Afweyne's involvement in anti-piracy activities.

    The UNODC said it remained skeptical about Afweyne's announcement. "He's a criminal so is by implication dishonest, so we take this with a pinch of salt," said Cole.

    The U.N. report said pirate leaders are now increasingly involved in land-based kidnap for ransom of foreign tourists and aid workers in northern Kenya and Somalia, as well as selling services as counter-piracy experts and consultants in ransom negotiations, and exploring "new types of criminal activity."

    Somalia has been in chaos since warlords toppled dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. His fall spawned clan warfare and Qaeda-linked al-Shabaab militants who are fighting to topple the Mogadishu government and impose a harsh brand of Islamic law.

    Related stories

    • World sea piracy falls to lowest level since 2008
    • Somalia pirate dens see decline as international efforts to stop seizures succeed
    • Pirates seize 24 sailors on Greek tanker off Togo coast

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    34 comments

    The Russians have a great way of dealing with pirates. They tie the pirates to the deck of their boat set the boat on fire and cast it adrift. Russians aren't very worried about the ACLU.

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    Explore related topics: somalia, pirates, piracy
  • 23
    Dec
    2012
    3:04pm, EST

    Hostages freed by Somali pirates after nearly 3 years in captivity

    By NBC News wire services

    BOSASSO, Somalia -- A ship and its crew of 22 sailors held by Somali pirates for almost three years have been freed after a two-week-long siege by maritime police, the government of the breakaway region of Puntland said on Sunday.

    The sailors aboard Panama-flagged MV Iceberg 1, from the Philippines, India, Yemen, Sudan, Ghana and Pakistan, were held for longer than any other hostages in the power of the pirates, who prey on shipping in the region, according to the president's office of the northern Somali enclave in a statement

    Maritime police laid siege to the vessel on Dec. 10 near the coastal village of Gara'ad in the region of Mudug.


    "After 2 years and 9 months in captivity, the hostages have suffered signs of physical torture and illness. The hostages are now receiving nutrition and medical care," said the statement.

    The ship originally had a crew of 24, but two had died since the roll-on roll-off cargo vessel was seized on March 29, 2010, some 10 miles from Aden, pirates said.

    One of the pirate leaders said they only released the ship after negotiation with Puntland officials and local elders.

    "They kindly requested the release of the ship we held for three years. Puntland forces had attacked us and tried to release the ship by force but they failed. We fought back and defeated them," the pirate known as Farah told Reuters.

    Farah did not disclose whether any ransom had been paid for the crew and the ship, owned by Azal Shipping in Dubai with a deadweight of 4,500 tonnes.

    Pirates rarely release ships without ransom, and usually raise their demands the longer they hold a vessel, because they charge for their expenses.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    International navies have had some recent success containing piracy in the Indian Ocean. 

    Although more than 100 hostages taken off Somalia are still being held captive, the number of hijackings of ships dropped to seven in the first 11 months of this year compared to 24 in the whole of 2011.

    Separately, Puntland said a group of eight Puntland soldiers responsible for briefly trying to sail away with a North Korea-flagged vessel, MV Daesan and its 33-member crew were jailed by a Puntland military court on Saturday.

    MV Daesan, a North Korean ship ferrying cement to Somali capital Mogadishu, was impounded by the Puntland authorities and fined last month by Puntland authorities who accused it of ditching its cargo off Somalia's coast.

    The soldiers had taken the vessel on Dec. 18.

    "Puntland Government managed to return the vessel back to the port within 24 hours; the soldiers were arrested and will be brought to justice," the authorities said.

    For Somali pirates, the risks of being arrested, killed or lost at sea are overshadowed by the potential for huge payouts. Ransoms for large ships in recent years have averaged close to $5 million. The largest reported ransom was $11 million for the Greek oil tanker MV Irene SL last year.

    The ransoms are often air-dropped down to hijacked ships. Somalia has been mired in conflict since President Siad Barre was overthrown by warlords in 1991 who then turned on each other.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this story.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    40 comments

    Only good pirate is a dead pirate. I don't understand why it is so hard to stop these hoodlums from screwing with commercial trade in open waters. Riddle their boat with holes and send them on their way.

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    Explore related topics: africa, somalia, pirates
  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    10:58am, EDT

    Farah Abdi Warsameh / AP

    Catch of the day in Somalia

    Somalis carry a swordfish and a shark on their heads from the ocean to the market in Mogadishu, Somalia on Thursday.

    • News from Africa
    • Follow @NBCNewsPictures on Twitter

    1 comment

    Detroit in 15 more years.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, africa, somalia, fishing, shark, mogadishu, swordfish
  • 6
    Oct
    2012
    12:43pm, EDT

    Kenyan soldiers on patrol in former stronghold of al Qaeda-backed militants

    Stuart Price/African Union-United Nations Information Support Team via AP

    A Kenyan soldier stands guard in the center of the southern Somali port city of Kismayu on Oct. 5.

    Reuters reports: Kenyan troops in Somalia are working flush out rebel remnants after al Qaeda-backed militants fled last week from their last major stronghold. "We don't want to be seen as an occupying force," Colonel Cyrus Oguna, a Kenyan army spokesman, told a Reuters reporter travelling with Kenyan forces. Al Shabaab fighters fled the southern Somali port city of Kismayu a week ago, leaving behind a small number of militants to carry out suicide bombings, hit-and-run grenade attacks and targeted shootings, Oguna said. Full Story

    Stuart Price/African Union-United Nations Information Support Team via AP

    Unexploded ordnance, including rocket-propelled grenades and mortar shells left behind by the Al-Qaeda-affiliated extremist group Al Shabaab, are destroyed in a controlled detonation in Kismayu on Oct. 5.

    Eds. note: These picture were made available Oct. 6

    Stuart Price/African Union-United Nations Information Support Team via AP

    Kenyan soldiers patrol in Kismayu.

    Stuart Price/African Union-United Nations Information Support Team via AP

    Kenyan soldiers patrol Kismayu on Oct. 5.

    Stuart Price/African Union-United Nations Information Support Team via AP

    A fighter of the pro-governmnet Ras Kimboni Brigade stands with a belt-fed machine gun inside the former compound housing the offices of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) during a combat engineering team's sweep for unexploded ordnance in Kismayu on Oct. 5.

    Related stories on PhotoBlog: 

    • Somalia pirate dens see decline as international efforts to stop seizures succeed
    • Somalia marks one year since Islamist militants were driven out of Mogadishu

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    1 comment

    Thay missed the minnarette by150 yards bad shot

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    Explore related topics: world-news, africa, somalia, military, al-qaeda, kenya
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