African
charter on maritime security and safety
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African leaders on
Saturday signed a deal to boost security off the continent's economically
crucial coasts, hoping to shore up development by tackling maritime crimes like
piracy and smuggling.
AFP
report continues:
Congolese
President Denis Sassou Nguesso hailed the African Union agreement as
"historic", while Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta said it showed
Africa's ability to put together a continent-wide strategy.
Sassou
Nguesso said 43 nations had adopted the binding agreement -- which will see
countries pay into a special fund for maritime security -- at a summit in
Togo's capital Lome.
The
deal is designed to improve information-sharing between African nations, a
weakness that pirates and smugglers have benefited from in the past, slipping
between territorial waters with little trouble.
The
talks drew 18 heads of state -- an unusually high figure for an AU meeting of
this kind, signalling the importance that governments have placed on the need
to cut piracy and other crime in Africa's waters.
As
he opened the summit, Chad's President Idriss Deby, the current AU chief, noted
that some 90 percent of Africa's imports and exports are transported by sea,
making maritime security key to the continent's economic future.
Of
the AU's 54 member states, 38 have coastlines.
Deby
said the charter would "allow the promotion of commerce and the exploitation
of the huge potential of the maritime sector, as well as the creation of wealth
and jobs in several industries".
It
would also "mark a decisive new step in the push to preserve the maritime
environment", he added.
The
deal will create new national and regional institutions to improve security in
African waters, while the signatories pledged a string of measures to protect
the maritime environment and fight trafficking in drugs, arms and people.
But
Timothy Walker, a maritime security researcher at the Institute for Security
Studies (ISS), said the deal would allow countries to withhold information from
each other if they judge this to be in the interests of national security.
"It's
a big step but it cannot be the final step. There is still a lot of work to
do," Walker told AFP.
- Piracy in focus -
"African
leaders have started to realize that the maritime domain is a source of
economic opportunity for the future," Walker added.
A
French Navy helicopter chases a boat carrying suspected Somali pirates as part
of an anti-piracy naval mission on May 3, 2009 ©Pierre Verdy (AFP)
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Togo's
Foreign Minister Robert Dussey told AFP ahead of the summit that there was a
clear need for African countries to work together to combat an upsurge in
piracy in order to make full use of the continent's maritime resources.
Piracy,
smuggling and other crimes at sea have cost the African maritime sector
hundreds of billions of dollars in recent decades, according to the AU.
Large-scale
illegal fishing also helps drive piracy as it depletes stocks, reducing the
legitimate economic activities of coastal communities.
In
West Africa alone, the AU estimates that illicit fishing causes losses of 170
billion CFA francs ($285 million, 260 million euros) every year.
World
piracy has been on the decline since 2012 after international naval patrols
were launched off East Africa in response to violent attacks by mostly
Somali-based pirates.
But
the focus of concern has shifted to the Gulf of Guinea, where a new class of
pirates -- mostly offshoots of militant groups from the Niger Delta -- have
become active.
At
least 27 attempted or successful hijackings and kidnappings at sea have been
recorded off west Africa since April, according to the International Maritime
Organization, compared to just two off east Africa.
The
17 countries lining the Gulf of Guinea have poor maritime surveillance
capacities and have been trying for several years to boost cooperation to clamp
down on piracy.
The
deal will need to be ratified by at least 15 countries before it comes into
force, and Barthelemy Blede, an ISS maritime researcher in Ivory Coast, said it
remained to be seen whether there was "real will" to make the deal a
reality.
"It's a historic act, but it's one thing to adopt a text and sign it, and another thing to ratify it," he told AFP.
Suspected
pirates keep their hands in the air as directed by a patrol from the
guided-missile cruiser USS Vella Gulf, in the Gulf of Aden ©Jason R. Zalasky
(Navy Visual News Service (NVNS)/AFP)
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