UN suggests options for prosecuting pirates

By Timothy Nsubuga

New York: An international tribunal set up by the Security Council under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter is among several options to prosecute pirates operating off the Somali coast; UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has suggested.

Piracy attacks have escalated worldwide in recent years owing to the increasing number of incidents off of the coast of Somalia since the overthrow of Siad Barre’s regime in 1991.  In 2008, 111 vessels were attacked and that number nearly doubled to 217 in 2009.

Although the number of incidents continues to be high, increased naval patrols off the Horn of Africa and in the Gulf of Aden have helped reduce the success rate of pirate attacks.  In spite of this positive development, as of May, 450 people were still being held hostage on ships captured by pirates off the Somali coast.

One of the seven options put forward by Ban Ki-moon has in fact already been operational in Kenya where a new high-security courtroom built by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime in the port town of Mombasa was opened in June.  The idea is to increase trial efficiency in the system and provide a secure and modern environment suitable for piracy cases.

Other options listed in the new report include creating a Somali court in the territory of another State in the region and setting up an international tribunal agreed upon by regional States and the UN.  The Secretary-General stressed that arrangements for imprisonment are just as important as the prosecution of pirates given the large number of suspects apprehended.

Acknowledging the difficult economic climate prevailing today, Ban Ki-moon also underlined the need for political and financial commitment from the international community to not only create a new judicial body but also to sustain it.


Visited 14 times, 1 visits today


2013/3/24

I will throw a hot stone behind CJ Odoki’s back
By John Baptist Oloka 25th March 2013:

The media broke news of More... (0)


2013/2/26

The late Mzee Kaguta was a naughty boy
By Lawrence Kasozi

25th February 2013: This is totally out of More... (0)


2013/2/26

Museveni is pathological hypocrite
By Norman Miwambo

25th February 2013: I don’t believe Museveni was More... (0)


2013/2/17

Obote is crying for his beloved country
By M. Suleman

18th February 2013: Uganda’s late president Dr Apollo More... (0)


2013/2/3

Wake up fools: Army took over long ago
By Bernard Ddumba

4th Feb 2013: Over the last two weeks, I seriously More... (0)


2013/2/3

NRM revolution is eating its own children
By Charles Businge

4th February 2013: In 1986, the new leadership promised More... (0)


2013/1/27

It’s lawful to resist coup plotters – let’s do it
By Elijah M. Tumwebaze

28th January 2013: In a powerful opinion article that More... (0)


2013/1/27

Our parliament only exists on paper
By M. Suleman

28th January 2013: Uganda is a country endowed with More... (0)


2013/1/22

Museveni is right to call NRM MPs idiots
By M. Suleman

21st Jan 2013: In the drama that followed More... (0)


2012/12/18

Isn’t Museveni a deranged psychopath?
By M. Suleman

17th Dec 2012: An emotional, grief-stricken, and More... (0)


 

World News

 
 
 

 

 

Follow us