Showing posts with label Analysis of problem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Analysis of problem. Show all posts

18 November 2008

Can there be International Law?

How can one enforce international law on the water? Or worse yet in law-less Somalia? The answer is not guards and safe passage ways, the answer is an international law which would give the pirates some type of discipline and punishment (Foucault) Currently there is no risk to pirating. Even if captured, which is highly unlikely, the two pirate attempts thwarted last week by the Indian navy did not capture the pirates, there is no standard to punishment.

But can there be international law? I don't believe so. Where would one extradite the captured pirates? to the nation who caught the pirates, to the nation of the flagged ship (not that that has any relevance to the ship at all) to the home country of the owners of the ship? Who punishes? Can we have an international tribunal? That would be the most effective measure, but that in and of itself is its own horror show.

There is also the problem of labelling. What exactly is a pirate attack? The UNCOLS has a stated definition.
  1. any illegal acts of violence or detention, or any act of depredation committed for private ends by the crew or passengers of a private ship or a private aircraft, and directed

    1. On the high seas, against another ship or aircraft, or against persons or property on board such ship or aircraft.

    2. Against a ship, aircraft, persons or property in a place outside the jurisdiction or any State

  2. Any act of voluntary participation in the operation of a ship or of an aircraft with knowledge of facts making it a pirate ship or aircraft.

  3. Any act inciting or of intentionally facilitating an act described in sub-paragraphs a or b.

(Article 101: United Nations Convention on the Laws of the Seas 1982)

This is a very clear definition, but the problem here is that certain acts can be labeled differently and will not come under the definition of piracy. Is the recent Sirius Star attack piracy or terrorism? Do the pirates have other ends for Sirius Star than just money? Couldn't that ship be used for terrorism? Are the Somali pirates doing this for private ends? Is it not a 'social movement' against the lack of regulation of fishing? Some pirates are using their gains to help the local infrastructure and schools, is that still piracy? Such a strict definition is problematic for many reasons.

The Achille Lauro case is an excellent case of why this definition has been problematic in the efforts against piracy, particularly because of the “official definition” of what a pirate attack is. In October of 1985, the Achille Lauro, a passenger liner, set sail from the port of Alexandria to Port Said in Egypt. Four men in connection with the Palestine Liberation Front hijacked the ship and held the passengers and the crew hostage with intention to conduct a terrorist attack in the port of Ashdod. (Snoddon 2007)When the potential attack was thwarted, the hijackers/ pirates/ terrorists, executed a Jewish- American wheelchair bound passenger Leon Klinghoffer and threw his body off the ship. (Achille Lauro 2008) The Egyptian government negotiated with the hijackers and the ship returned to Port Said. The Egyptian government then offered safe passage to the hijackers with a flight out of the county but the flight was intercepted by a U.S. Navy aircraft and the flight was forced to land at a NATO base in Italy. Once in Italy, the Italian government refused to extradite the criminal to the United States. The act of hijacking the ship and killing a passenger was not labeled as piracy because the ends of the attack were for political purposes; therefore the international courts had no jurisdiction. (Gottschalk 2000)

The labeling of the attack on the Achille Lauro defined the jurisdiction of the case and changed the potential outcome of the case. Although the four hijackers were tried in Italy, Abu Abbas, the founder and leader of the Palestine Liberation Front, left the jurisdiction of Italy and was tried in absentia, but was not captured until the 2003 invasion of Iraq. (Achille Lauro 2008) Had the international legal community been able to label the incident as piracy, as the United States did, the United States would have been able to arrest the pirates under 18USC, sub. Sec. 1651 “Whoever, on the high seas, commits the crime of piracy as defined by the law of nations, and is afterwards brought into or found in the United States, shall be imprisoned for life” (Section 1651. Piracy under law of nations 2004)

10 November 2008

The Problem with the Hegemonic View of Piracy

Problem with the Hegemonic view of Piracy
By: Alexandra Sommers
5 Nov 2008

The issue of modern-day piracy has recently reached the news media cycle. Although these attacks have been taking place since the early 1990s, the news media has finally picked up on the pirate attacks. The media however has only chosen to publish information about the Somalia attacks. This is due in part to the ‘scandal’ surrounding the recent attack on MV Faina. (Somali Pirates Seize 33 Tanks) This attack made the news media because of the tanks that are aboard the ships that was hijacked. The hegemonic nature of the news media makes it difficult news to break that is not ‘scandalous’ and ‘sexy.’ The week of 10-23 to 11-02 had 7 attacks reported, one in which the ship was hijacked and the 20 crew was taken hostage. (Weekly Piracy Report) The material on board of this ship is iron ore pellets. This attack was on the same day that CNN reported that five pirate attacks had been thwarted in one day. (Five pirate attacks repelled off Somalia in one day) The pirate attack that happened that day has not been reported on by CNN. Questions to consider are what is the current view of piracy among the masses? Why is there this perception? To understand the common perception of piracy, I believe that it is necessary to look at both the news media coverage of modern-day piracy and to examine popular culture reference to piracy. One such popular cultural reference which I believe has an impact on the perceptions of the American masses is The Pirates of the Caribbean movies. The success and pervasiveness of these movies in American culture is part of the reason why we do not perceive modern-day piracy as a threat. In these movies, the conception of piracy has been romanticized. The cultural understanding of piracy is one of swashbuckling, saving the day type pirates.

Five pirate attacks repelled off Somalia in one day.

Weekly Piracy Report.

Somalia's pirates seize 33 tanks