A proposed new UN resolution calls on all countries with a stake in maritime safety to send naval ships and military aircraft to fight piracy on the high seas off the coast of Somalia, a draft report states.
The draft UN Security Council resolution would also call on ships and planes to use “the necessary means” to stop acts of piracy. It was drafted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, which means its provisions can be enforced militarily.
The French-drafted resolution was expected to be put to a vote in the council early next week, council diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because discussions are taking place in private.
The draft resolution expresses grave concern at “the recent proliferation of acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea against vessels off the coast of Somalia.” It also notes with concern “that increasingly violent acts of piracy are carried out with heavier weaponry, in a larger area off the coast of Somalia” using mother ships and more sophisticated methods of attack.
On Thursday, Somali pirates holding a hijacked Ukrainian cargo ship loaded with tanks and heavy weapons said they will not release it for less than US$20 million and warned they would fight back against any commando-style rescue attempts. A half-dozen US Navy warships have surrounded the MV Faina, which was seized last Thursday off the central coast of Somalia.
The new draft resolution only applies to pirates off Somalia, whose 3,025km coastline is the longest in Africa and near key shipping routes that connect the Indian Ocean with the Red Sea.
Most pirate attacks occur in the Gulf of Aden, one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, to the north of Somalia. But recently pirates have been targeting Indian Ocean waters off eastern Somalia.
More than 60 ships have been attacked in the notorious African waters this year.
The draft resolution says the pirates and robbers pose a “serious threat ... to the prompt, safe and effective delivery of humanitarian aid to Somalia,” where as many as 3.5 million Somalis will reportedly be dependent on food aid by the end of the year.
It urges all states and regional organizations to continue taking action to protect UN World Food Programme maritime convoys, which are vital to bring humanitarian assistance to as many as 3.5 million Somalis who will reportedly be dependent on food aid by the end of the year.
A resolution adopted by the Security Council in early June authorized countries, for a period of six months, with advance notice, to enter Somalia’s territorial waters and use “all necessary means” to stop acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea.
The new draft resolution has no time limit.
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