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The Washington Times Online Edition

BRIEFLY: Somali piracy lawless, lucrative

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) The spoils of a career as a pirate off Somalia’s coast were simply too good for Abdi Muse to pass up. He bought two Land Cruisers and a new home, then married two women in one passionate week.

“I was giving away money to everyone I met,” said Muse, 38, who said he made $90,000 hijacking ships. “After two months, I had no money left. Can you believe it?”

For years, Somali pirates like Muse have found lucrative work stalking the country’s lawless coast, seizing boats and negotiating ransoms. But these brazen assailants could soon face more force as the United States and France muster international support for taking them on.

“This is a very important and serious signal that the nations of the world take [piracy] seriously,” said Cmdr. Lydia Robertson, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Navy.

The United States has been leading international patrols to combat piracy along Somalia’s unruly 1,880-mile coast, the longest in Africa and near key shipping routes. Now, the U.S. and France are drafting a U.N. resolution that would allow countries to chase and arrest pirates after a spate of recent attacks, including a Spanish tuna boat hijacked last month by pirates firing rocket-propelled grenades and a Dubai-flagged cargo ship seized while carrying food to the desperately poor country.

French officials say they are pushing for a resolution that would make it easier for armies to swoop into other countries’ waters and nab pirates. The push comes after French commandos freed hostages on a French tourist yacht seized last month off the coast of Somalia, and then chased the pirates on land and arrested them.

“The international community must respond and set up a rotating mechanism to control and keep watch with our naval forces so as to guarantee the security and protection of all those who fish or sail through that zone,” Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos said.

Many Somali pirates are trained fighters linked to politically powerful clans that have carved the country into armed fiefdoms; others are young thugs enlisted to do the dirty work for older, more powerful criminals, who turn a profit by taking a cut of the ransom money and selling the ship’s cargo.

Pirates often dress in military fatigues and drive speedboats equipped with satellite phones and Global Positioning System devices. They are typically armed with automatic weapons, anti-tank rocket launchers and grenades, according to the U.N. Monitoring Group on Somalia.

Somalia’s already overstretched government welcomed the initiative to involve international forces in patrolling its pirate-infested coastal waters. Racked by more than a decade of violence and anarchy, Somalia does not have a navy, and the transitional government formed in 2004 with U.N. help has struggled to contain a deadly insurgency.

“These forces could come inside the country if it is needed,” said government spokesman Abdi Hagi Gobdon.

To some pirates, however, the prospect of international force is not particularly daunting.

“We are not scared of the U.S. troops or any other troops stationed off our waters. Why should we be scared?” asked Siyad, a Somali pirate who asked that his full name not be used for fear of reprisals.

“They have weapons, but so do we. And we are the ones with the human shields,” he said, noting that troops are loath to use force because it risks harming hostages.

The International Maritime Bureau says piracy worldwide is on the rise, with seafarers suffering 49 attacks between January and March — up 20 percent from the same period last year.

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