Southeast Asia pirates shift from hijackings to kidnappings

Southeast Asia pirates shift from hijackings to kidnappings

November 09, 2016
Southeast Asia pirates shift from hijackings to kidnappings
Southeast Asia pirates shift from hijackings to kidnappings

SINGAPORE — Pirates are shifting from hijacking cargo ships to the more lucrative crime of kidnapping for ransom, a report said on Tuesday, days after Philippine Islamic militants killed one German sailor and kidnapped another.

“Piracy has changed in the past three years,” said Devlin McStay, data analyst at IHS Maritime and Trade, which is part of global market intelligence firm IHS Markit.

“We are seeing the number of kidnappings rise in the piracy hotspots of Southeast Asia and West Africa,” he added.

On Monday the Philippine military confirmed the Abu Sayyaf group had killed a German woman and abducted her companion from their yacht off the southern Philippines.

Suspected Abu Sayyaf militants last month also kidnapped the captain and a Filipino crewmember of a South Korean cargo ship in the southern Philippines.

The military said the abduction marked the first time that kidnappers in the area had targeted a large ship, with previous attempts usually focusing on smaller vessels.

While the Abu Sayyaf’s leaders have in recent years pledged allegiance to the Daesh (the so-called IS), analysts say they are mainly focused on a lucrative kidnapping business rather than religious ideology.

The militants earlier this year beheaded two Canadian hostages they had seized on land, after failing to collect a ransom.

Ridzwan Rahmat, a Singapore-based naval analyst at IHS Jane’s, told AFP that a clampdown by Southeast Asian governments on the black market trade in bunker oil taken from hijacked vessels may have forced pirates to consider “kidnap-for-ransom operations that could be more lucrative financially.”

IHS data showed there were 44 pirate kidnappings involving ship crew in West Africa and Southeast Asia between January and September this year, up from 19 the previous year and just nine in all of 2014.

In Southeast Asia, “we are now seeing terrorist groups, such as Abu Sayyaf, employing a modus operandi more commonly associated with the region’s pirate groups,” Ridzwan said.

Between March and July 2016, armed cells affiliated with the Abu Sayyaf are suspected to have been behind at least six known cases of kidnapping for ransom at sea, he said. — AFP


November 09, 2016
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