
Dryad: International Inaction Breeds Piracy in the Gulf of Guinea
The international
community is on the spot for slow action against the rising menace of piracy in
the Gulf of Guinea, which has become the most dangerous environment for
commercial maritime operations in the world.
In its 2021 annual
report, British security intelligence firm Dryad Global suggests that large
international organizations such as the United Nations, NATO and the European
Union have been conspicuously absent in offering tangible solutions to piracy
in West Africa. The international bodies, together with coastal West Africa
states, have largely failed to implement frameworks that have the potential to
significantly reduce maritime crime and piracy in the region.
EU has demonstrated lukewarm action
Only the EU has
demonstrated lukewarm action after developing a ‘Gulf of Guinea action plan’ in
2014, but it only committed to a pilot case of its ‘coordinated maritime
presence’ security concept at the beginning of 2021, seven years later.
“The international
community needs to provide the requisite leadership and assistance to the Gulf
of Guinea states and to respond with programs of support that pay attention to
the onshore crises that underpin piracy as well as the offshore piracy
problem,” said Shannon McSkimming, Dryad Global analyst.
In the report,
Dryad also contends that coastal West African nations have remained passive in
tackling the problem by failing to implement frameworks like the Yaoundé Code
of Conduct, the Lomé Charter and the ECOWAS Integrated Maritime Strategy.
“While the Gulf of Guinea remains the most
dangerous environment for commercial maritime operations, it remains vital that
implementation of these supranational measures be held to account,” said Dryad.
Pirate operations in the Gulf of Guinea a persistent threat to the
safety and security of crews and vessels,
The Dryad report
shows that pirate operations in the Gulf of Guinea continue to present a
serious and persistent threat to the safety and security of crews and vessels,
with 136 seafarers abducted in 27 incidents in 2020.
Attacks are becoming increasingly violent
Most worrisome is
that attacks are becoming increasingly violent, with the use of guns reported
in over 80 percent of kidnapping incidents last year. Overall, 132 incidents
that included robbery, kidnapping, violent armed boarding and hijack were
reported in 2020.
While West Africa
remains a hotbed of piracy, only 36 incidents occurred in the entire Indian
Ocean, of which none were tangibly linked to issues of piracy.