Business
Piracy Drops As Nigeria’s Deep Blue Project Kicks Off
The International Maritime Bureau (IMB) has reported a drop in piracy attacks in Nigeria in the third quarter of 2019.
IMB said in its latest report, “Nigeria has reduced Q3 piracy attacks from 41 in 2018 to 29 in 2019,” which represents nearly 30 per cent year-on-year reduction.
This is as the Deep Blue Project, a comprehensive maritime security architecture initiated by the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), in collaboration with the military and other security agencies, comes into operation.
The piracy reporting body also said there was a decrease in global piracy incidents during the first nine months of 2019, compared with the corresponding period in 2018, in a fall to a five-year low.
Director of IMB, a specialised division of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), Pottengal Mukundan, said, ”119 incidents have been reported to the IMB Piracy Reporting Centre in 2019, compared to 156 incidents for the same period in 2018. Overall, the 2019 incidents include 95 vessels boarded, 10 vessels fired upon, 10 attempted attacks, and four vessels hijacked. The number of crew taken hostage through the first nine months has declined from 112 in 2018 to 49 in 2019.”
However, according to IMB, piracy and armed robbery attacks remain a challenge in the Gulf of Guinea.
The decline in piracy and armed robbery attacks on vessels came as the Deep Blue Project, Nigeria’s integrated security and waterways protection infrastructure, began to yield results.
The project is handled by an Israeli firm, Homeland Security International (HLSI). It involves the training of field and technical operatives drawn from the various strata of the security services and NIMASA as well as acquisition of assets to combat maritime crime, such as fast intervention vessels, surveillance aircraft, and other facilities, and establishment of a command and control centre for data collection and information sharing to aid targeted enforcement.
The Deep Blue Project aims at building a formidable integrated surveillance and security architecture that will broadly combat maritime crime and criminalities in Nigeria’s waterways up to the Gulf of Guinea.
Nkpemenyie McDominic, Lagos
Business
Association Woos Govt, Coys On Boat Operators Employments
Business
FG Approves $1 Bn AFCFTA Credit Facility For Nigerian Exporters
Business
NIWA Harps On Avoidance Of Leaking Boats
-
Nation2 days ago
Asarama Kingdom Condemns Gruesome Murder of A Commercial Vehicle Driver
-
Rivers2 days ago
Monarch Raises Alarm Over Defamatory Politics … Urges For Unity In Ogoni
-
News2 days ago
Nigeria, Ethiopia Seal Agreement To Transfer 100 Nigerian Prisoners
-
News2 days ago
Nigeria No Longer Safe For Drug Cartels – Marwa
-
News2 days ago
Xenophobia: 268 Nigerian Returnees Arrive In Lagos From S’Africa
-
News2 days agoFG Declares Today Public Holiday To Mark Democracy Day
-
Women2 days ago
Nigerian Women And Dividends Of Democracy
-
Business2 days ago
FG Approves $1 Bn AFCFTA Credit Facility For Nigerian Exporters
