ABOARD RMS QUEEN 
MARY (Reuters) - Posted between septuagenarian passengers in deck 
chairs, lookouts stand watch over the Gulf of Aden, scanning the horizon
 for pirates. After 
more than half a decade of Somali men attacking Indian Ocean shipping 
from small speedboats with AK-47s, grappling hooks and ladders, the 
number of attacks is falling fast.
The
 last merchant ship to be successfully hijacked, naval officers 
monitoring piracy say, was at least nine months ago. It's a far cry from
 the height of the piracy epidemic two years ago, when several ships 
might be taken in a single week to be traded for airdropped 
multi-million dollar ransoms. But
 as the Queen Mary 2, one of the world's most recognisable ocean liners,
 passes through the Red Sea, Indian Ocean and out towards Dubai, its 
owners and crew are taking few chances.
"The
 pirates have weapons and are not afraid to use them," Lieutenant 
Commander Ollie Hutchinson, the British Royal Navy liaison officer 
aboard the liner for its trip through the Indian Ocean, tells a briefing
 of passengers in the ship's theatre. "Once the pirates have identified 
their target, they will try whatever means they can to get on board." To
 underline his point, he displays a picture of an Italian helicopter hit
 by small arms fire from a pirate dhow late last year followed by 
assorted images of gunmen holding AK-47 assault rifles and rocket 
propelled grenades.
In
 truth, the Queen Mary 2 - carrying 2,500 passengers and 1,300 crew from
 Southampton to Dubai on the first leg of a world cruise - is not 
particularly at risk. Some
 345 metres long and 14 stories high, even its promenade deck is seven 
floors above the sea. The liner is fast, hard to board and - on this 
passage at least - moderately well armed. Like many merchant vessels, the QM2 now carries armed private contractors when passing through areas of pirate risk.
Cunard
 will not discuss precise security arrangements. But contractors on 
other vessels routinely carry M-16-type assault rifles and sometimes 
belt-fed machine guns, often picked up from ships acting as floating 
offshore armouries near Djibouti and Sri Lanka. Additional
 lookouts from the ship's regular onboard security force - mostly 
Filipinos - are also posted on the main deck to give warning of any 
suspicious craft. "Depending
 on what happens with attacks, I'm hopeful we may be able to reduce our 
security measures when we pass through the same waters next year," says 
Commodore Christopher Rynd, senior captain of the British-based Cunard 
line and current master of the QM2. "But that's not a decision we will 
be making at this stage."
A CHANGING GAME?
When
 ships do come under attack, the first phone to ring is usually in a 
nondescript white bungalow in the gardens of the British Embassy in 
Dubai. The UK Marine 
Transport Operation (UKMTO) was set up shortly after the September 11, 
2001 attacks to provide security advice to British shipping in the area.
 As pirate attacks soared in the second half of the last decade, it 
found itself coordinating international shipping across much of the 
Indian Ocean.
Most 
vessels passing through the area - container ships, tankers, cruise 
liners and dhows - now register daily with UKMTO. If they believe they 
are in danger, they will contact the British team to request military 
support. "We've had 
calls when you could hear gunfire and rocket propelled grenades in the 
background," says Lieutenant Commander Simon Goodes, the current officer
 in charge. "But lately, the phones are ringing much less."
The
 only confirmed attack this year, Goodes said, was on a merchant vessel 
in early January as it sailed towards the Kenyan port of Mombasa. 
On-board private security guards repelled the assault after a 30 minute 
firefight. According 
to the European Union anti-piracy task force EU NAVFOR, 2012 saw only 36
 confirmed attacks and a further 73 "suspicious events" - incidents in 
which a crew report a suspicious craft that might be pirate but could 
also be simply an innocent fishing boat. That itself was a substantial 
fall from 2011, with 176 attacks and 166 "suspicious events".
Only five ships were captured in 2012, down from 25 in 2011 and 27 in 2010. "This
 is an important year," says Lieutenant Commander Jacqueline Sheriff, 
spokeswoman for EU NAVFOR. "We will find out whether this fall in piracy
 is really sustainable." Sea-borne
 attacks off West Africa, however, appear to be on the rise in what some
 analysts believe is a sign that Nigerian and other criminal gangs may 
be tempted by the Somali pirate model.
PIRATE BUSINESS MODEL FAILING?
Exactly what is behind the fall in Somali piracy is a matter of debate.
Perhaps
 unsurprisingly, the navies patrolling the Indian Ocean say the numbers 
show they are finally having an impact. Since piracy first grabbed 
global attention in 2008, a number of nations have sent ships to the 
region.
Sailing 
through the Internationally Registered Transit Corridor, a protected 
route between Somalia and Yemen, the QM2 passed warships from the United
 States, France, India and Australia.
As
 well as the EU force, there are separate flotillas from NATO and 
U.S.-led coalition forces that often include Asian vessels. Several 
other nations including China and Russia also keep ships there, running 
convoys through the "high-risk zone".
In
 May last year, EU NAVFOR launched its first onshore raid, targeting a 
suspected pirate group on the beach as it prepared to head to sea with 
helicopter and small arms fire.
Not
 everyone, however, believes that explains the fall. For many in the 
shipping industry, the fall in attacks is a vindication of the decision 
to massively ramp up the use of armed guards.
So
 far, not a single ship with armed guards has been taken by pirates - 
although naval officers and other piracy specialists say hired guards 
can be excessively trigger-happy and have fired on innocent fishermen 
from India, Oman and Yemen.
The
 situation is also changing in Somalia, which has been without a 
functioning government for two decades. The transitional administration 
is becoming more successful, as is a Kenyan-dominated African military 
force sent in to tackle Islamist rebels.
RETIRED PIRATE, DARKENED LINER
Last month, one of Somalia's highest profile pirates told Reuters he was giving up his life of crime at sea.
"I
 have given up piracy and succeeded in encouraging more youths to give 
up piracy," said Mohamed Abdi Hassan. "It was not due to fear of 
warships. It was just a decision."
In
 an apparently separate development, three Syrian hostages held since 
2010 were released without the payment of a ransom. Four vessels are 
currently still held by pirates along with 108 hostages, the EU says.
The
 bottom line, some military officers and analysts believe, may be that 
the lower success rate for pirates in the last year has prompted those 
bankrolling them to stop.
But
 no one is taking the pirates for granted. An apparent attempted 
night-time attack on a merchant ship only a handful of miles from the 
entrance to the Gulf at the Strait of Hormuz was a reminder attacks can 
take place across a huge area.
Shortly
 before entering the Suez Canal, QM2 held a security drill to instruct 
passengers in what to do if the ship comes under attack.
Passengers were urged to return below and sit in the companionway outside their rooms until the danger passed.
As
 dusk falls, orders are given to darken ship. Passengers close the 
curtains over their portholes or balcony windows, while crew members 
install blackout curtains in public areas. Basic running lights remain 
on to avoid collision, however.
The
 purpose, Commodore Rynd says, is to make it harder for any pirates to 
identify what kind of ship the QM2 might be and how far away. The 
darkened ship also makes it easier for the lookouts, equipped with night
 vision goggles, to see.
Other
 more vulnerable ships - particularly the "low and slow" - take more 
precautions. Shortly after first light, QM2 passes a bulk carrier, its 
fire hoses blasting over its stern to make it harder for pirates to 
clamber aboard.
In more remote parts of the Indian Ocean, the nearest naval support can be eight or nine hours away.
Aboard the liner, however, passengers seem largely unconcerned.
"It
 doesn't worry me at all," says Kiki O'Connell, 66, from Portland, 
Maine, as the ship approached Dubai. "Although I don't suppose we'll see
 any pirates now. I was hoping for Johnny Depp."
Source: Yahoo  
 
 
 
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