Pirate Attacks On Vessels In Nigeria Declines By 76 percent In 9 Months

Pirate Attacks On Vessels In Nigeria Declines By 76percet In 9 Months

Attacks by pirates and armed robberies at sea in Nigeria have declined from 17 in the first nine months of 2020 to only four in the corresponding period of 2021, this is according to the International Maritime Bureau (IMB) Piracy Reporting Centre.

The figure marks a 76.5 percent decline in recorded incidents against ships in the country. 

The IMB Piracy Reporting Centre stated that the attacks against ships across the world is at its lowest number since 1994.

It stated further that the Gulf of Guinea region recorded 28 incidents of piracy and armed robbery in the first nine months of 2021, compared to 46 for the same period in 2020.

“Crew kidnappings in the region have dropped with only one crew member kidnapped in quarter three of 2021, compared to 31 crew members taken in five separate incidents during quarter three of 2020.

“All quarter three incidents in 2021 were also against vessels at port anchorages while the average successful kidnapping location in quarter three of 2020 was approximately 100 nautical miles from land,” it said.

The bureau attributed the decline in piracy and armed robbery incidents in the Gulf of Guinea region to improved maritime security and response coordination measures embraced by regional and national authorities.

Despite these gains, however, it warned that the risk to crew remains high in the region, urging that such efforts must therefore be sustained.

READ ALSO: Lagos Blue Rail Project Supported By CBN, Three Other Banks

“We welcome the decrease of piracy and armed robbery attacks in the Gulf of Guinea and the efforts taken by maritime authorities in the region.

“There needs to be sustained efforts to ensure the continued safety of seafarers as they transport essential goods throughout the region. Coastal states must redouble their coordination and security measures to ensure that piracy and armed robbery incidents continue to decline,” IMB Director, Michael Howlett, stated. 

IMB’s latest global piracy report recorded 97 incidents of piracy and armed robbery for the first nine months of 2021 – the lowest level of reported incidents since 1994.

In 2021, IMB’s Piracy Reporting Centre (PRC) reported 85 vessels boarded, nine attempted attacks, two vessels fired upon and one vessel hijacked.

Reported incidents are down to their lowest level in decades, but violence against seafarers has continued with 51 crew kidnapped, eight taken hostage, five threatened, three injured, two assaulted and one killed, according to the latest IMB statistics.