Showing posts with label piracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label piracy. Show all posts

2 tacks to combat piracy

Year's end finds 2 countries setting different courses to combat the recent spate of pirate attacks in the Gulf of Aden off the coast of Somalia.
In the United States, just before Thanksgiving, a federal jury in Virginia returned convictions for piracy and other offenses against 4 Somali defendants. (credit for detail from 2010 courtroom sketch by Alba Bragoli/AP) The verdict came one month after the judge in the case, United States v. Hasan, sustained a charge brought under 18 U.S.C. § 1651. The statute provides, in language dating to 1819:

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.
Yet in the same courthouse a few months earlier, a different federal judge, in the case of United States v. Said, had dismissed a piracy charge brought against 6 other Somali men. Tripping the latter judge up was Congress' reference in § 1651 to "the law of nations."
The opposite rulings reflect uncertainties about whether an old legal framework presents the proper way to proceed against 21st C. pirates. It's a puzzle addressed in this discussion by our OJ colleagues, and in many IntLawGrrls posts available here.
In the United States, the discrepancy next awaits consideration by the Virginia-based Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit.
France, meanwhile, has taken another tack.
France also has been involved in policing piracy in the Gulf of Aden. (credit for March 2010 of French naval vessel, with "Somali pirate skiffs" in foreground) France also has found that its old laws fell short -- and so it's opted for a legislative fix.
Shortly before Christmas, the Sénat voted unanimously in favor of the Loi de lutte contre la piraterie et d'exercice des pouvoirs de police de l'Etat en mer -- a bill to ease the pursuit and punishment of pirates that the legislature's lower house already had approved.
Key components:
► An 1825 French antipiracy law having been abrogated in 2007, the newly adopted law reintroduces into the penal code the crime of piracy -- a crime may be pursued via universal jurisdiction. The new law applies to acts of piracy "within the meaning of" the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, "committed ... on the high seas," "in maritime spaces outside any state's jurisdiction," and "when international law permits, in a state's territorial waters." That Convention is an artifact of the law of nations to which France has been a state party since 1996, but to which, as posted, the United States does not belong.
► The new statute further establishes a legal regime for detaining suspects onboard French naval vessels while they are being transported to judicial authorities. These Mesures prises à l'encontre des personnes à bord des navires respond to a March 2010 judgment, Affaire Medvedyev et Autres c. France, in which the European Court of Human Rights held that France had violated the guarantee of liberty and security of person in Article 5 of Europe's human rights convention by its high-seas detention in 2002 of members of a ship's crew who were suspected of trafficking in drugs.


(Deep thanks for invaluable assistance with this post to University of California-Davis LL.M. student Johann Morri, on leave this year from his post as a French administrative law judge.)

Piracy duel

Our own Beth Van Schaack is debating laws of war and law on piracy at Opinio Juris. Her post responded to a post byDr. Douglas Guilfoyle, Lecturer in Law, Faculty of Laws, University College London. He subsequently filed a reply post.
Check 'em out.

On September 19

On this day in ...
... 2010 (today), it be International Talk Like a Pirate Day. Created by a couple of parodic Oregonians in 1996, the holiday's since sailed across the bounding main. Not U.N.-recognized but fun, mateys. Though a wee bit male-dominated in cyberform. Heave to, ye 'Grrls, and talk a while like yer foremother Grace O'Malley (image credit), and her sister pirates. Arrrrrrrr.

(Prior September 19 posts are here, here, and here.)

Write On! IHL Yearbook

(Write On! is an occasional item about notable calls for papers.)

The Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law invites submissions of manuscripts on international humanitarian law. Sponsored by the Hague-based T.M.C. Asser Instituut (prior IntLawGrrls post), this peer-reviewed Yearbook is published annually by T.M.C. Asser Press/CambridgeUniversity Press.
Although papers on any topic related to international humanitarian law are welcome, the editors are especially interested in receiving submissions on the principal theme of their next issue, Volume 13 [2010]. The theme is "Maritime Operations" -- inspired, of course, by recent piracy news, yet broader in its potential scope. Topics might include:
► The applicability of international humanitarian law during counter-piracy operations;
► Detention during maritime operations;
► Maritime security zones;
► Blockades;
► Maritime operations during non-international armed conflicts; and
► Protection of the environment during maritime warfare.
The Yearbook also accepts both articles (ballpark range of 15,000-20,000 words, including footnotes) and shorter pieces on any current development in international humanitarian law. These current developments pieces, which are not limited to the volume's principal theme, typically address international humanitarian law issues that have arisen during the year, including, for example:
► Codification;
► Important publications; and
► Decisions of courts and tribunals.
Submissions should be sent by December 2010, via e-mail to the Yearbook's Managing Editor, Dr. Louise Arimatsu (left), Department of Law, London School of Economics, at l.arimatsu@lse.ac.uk. Questions may be addressed to her or to the Yearbook's Editor-in-Chief, Professor Michael N. Schmitt, Durham Law School, at michael.schmitt@durham.ac.uk.

On the Job! Anti-piracy project

(On the Job! pays occasional notice to interesting intlaw job notices)

One Earth Future Foundation, a 2-year-old, Colorado-based nongovernmental organization, is seeking a full-time Project Manager for its Oceans Beyond Piracy project, which
engages representatives from maritime industries, ship owners, human rights organizations, governments, security firms, insurance companies, and other organizations to design and implement short and long term plans for dealing with maritime piracy.
Short-term focus will be on piracy off the coast of Somalia, an issue about which IntLawGrrls have addressed in posts available here. Long-term, the group plans to bring together an oceans working group.
Persons with considerable international experience sought; details here.


On May 12

On this day in ...
... 1975 (35 years ago today), naval gunboats of Khmer Rouge-controlled Cambodia seized the American freighter Mayaguez and its 39 crew members. U.S. President Gerald R. Ford (left) called the capture "an 'act of piracy' and promised swift action to rescue the captured Americans." Two days later, he sent Marines to the island where the crew was being held and ordered the port bombed; Cambodia "was already in the process of releasing the crew of the Mayaguez and the ship," and 41 "Americans died, most of them in an accidental explosion during the attack." A later congressional inquiry criticized the administration for failing to exhaust diplomatic channels before using force; nevertheless, as indicated by the Time cover above, the rescue effort won popular support in the United States.


(Prior May 12 posts are here, here, and here)

Suppressing Maritime Piracy: What Are The Options?

Further to Diane's post below, this post is to call attention to a report produced by the ASIL, the Academic Council on the UN System (ACUNS) and the One Earth Future Foundation on international piracy. The report grew out of a conference on the topic, details of which are here and here. (I was a participant along with American Society of International Law Executive Director Betsy Andersen). The conference and report focused on the following topics:
  • Can the crime of piracy be added to the jurisdiction of the ICC? If so, what is the process for doing so?
  • Given the politics around the 2010 ICC review conference (the possibility that the crime of aggression will be added to the ICC’s jurisdiction; the desire on the part of some to add terrorism), how likely is it that the ICC might try pirates in the near future?
  • What are the same possibilities for the Law of the Sea Tribunal?
  • What are the advantages and disadvantages of using (third party) national governments to try apprehended pirates? How might universal jurisdiction work in practice with regard to the crime of piracy in the current era?
  • What alternative governance options exist to prosecute pirates?
  • What are the prospects for a special tribunal on piracy? How might this be established? By whom or under whose auspices? Through what processes?
My presentation focused on the international/hybrid tribunal option and discussed the different modalities by which international or hybrid tribunals have been established in the past:
  • by coercion through the Security Council (ICTY & ICTR)),
  • by consent with a host government (SCSL, ECCC, STL), or
  • as part of a transitional administration (Special Panels in East Timor & Kosovo).
I also discussed potential regional and bilateral arrangements as well as other cooperative arrangements among affected states (along the lines of the mixed antislavery commissions of the 19th century, which IntLawGrrl Jenny Martinez (right) has written about, or the Lockerbie Tribunal). My presentation argued that given the vagaries of incorporation of the piracy prohibition into domestic law and the demonstrated inability and unwillingness of states to aggressively prosecute offenders, the international community needs a more comprehensive regime to effectively prosecute acts of piracy to supplement the cooperative military and preventative responses to date.
The Security Council's action is indeed welcome. Interestingly, so far, the Council has been careful not to identify piracy per se as a threat to the peace. In the Somalia resolutions, the Council designates the situation in Somalia as the threat that is exacerbated by piracy. Several states (including South Africa) are on record opposing the idea that piracy per se constitutes a threat to the peace. China has taken the opposite position. In its Resolution 1918, the Council asks the Secretary General to report on options
to further the aim of prosecuting and imprisoning persons responsible for acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea.
No doubt the ASIL/ACUNS/OEF report will feature prominently in this research. Check it out!

Ahoy, there! New tribunal?

Keep reading that ad hoc criminal tribunals are destined for Davey Jones' locker.
Apparently no one's given the United Nations that memo.
Not only did that intergovernmental organization establish the Special Tribunal for Lebanon a while back (prior posts), but also yesterday the U.N. Security Council unanimously resolved to consider an international piracy tribunal.
The latest in a 2-years-on series of resolutions on "The situation in Somalia," Resolution 1918 (2010) 1st recited a litany of concerns about attacks by pirates off the coast of that horn-of-Africa nation. (See Beth Van Schaack's post today, above, as well as IntLawGrrls' prior posts). Then it alluded to problems in bringing offenders to account, even as it noted that there've been some prosecutions in some national courts. (Justice systems specifically mentioned were Kenya (right) (photo credit) and the Seychelles. A few pirates also have found themselves haled before national courts in the United States and elsewhere.)
After urging more concerted efforts by all countries, the Security Council, in ¶ 4 of Resolution 1918, requested U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
to present to the Security Council within 3 months a report on possible options to further the aim of prosecuting and imprisoning persons responsible for acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea off the coast of Somalia ...
Options explicitly contemplated:
► "creating special domestic chambers possibly with international components"
► "a regional tribunal or an international tribunal and corresponding imprisonment arrangements"
In preparing its report, Ban's staff is to consider the work of the Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia, as well as "the existing practice in establishing international and mixed tribunals ..."
Time will tell if yet another tribunal weighs anchor.

Piracy & Terrorism: A Convergence

We've discussed before the international and domestic legal regimes governing the crime of piracy and the capture of Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse (left), presumed to be a Somali pirate involved in the attack against the Maersk Alabama (below right) back in April 2009.
Muse has now been indicted (the probable cause complaint against him is available here) under the following substantive statutes:


He's also convicted of engaging in a conspiracy to commit same. Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3238, the U.S. will prosecute Muse in the Southern District of New York, which was the jurisdiction to which he was first brought after allegedly committing his crimes on the high seas. The 10-count indictment is discussed here.

The indictment reveals the emerging conceptual overlap between crimes of terrorism and piracy--both types of organized crime habitually committed by non-state actors enjoying refuge in lawless regions in situations of asymetrical power and resources that do not trigger the application of humanitarian law (the law of war). The second and third statutes mentioned above appear in the anti-terrorism chapters of Title 18. (Indeed, the FBI agent swearing the complaint is part of the Joint Terrorism Task Force in New York). Section 1203 was implemented in connection with the United States' ratification of the International Convention Against the Taking of Hostages, which defines the offense as follows:

Any person who seizes or detains and threatens to kill, to injure or to continue to detain another person (hereinafter referred to as the "hostage") in order to compel a third party, namely, a State, an international intergovernmental organization, a natural or juridical person, or a group of persons, to do or abstain from doing any act as an explicit or implicit condition for the release of the hostage commits the offence of taking of hostages ("hostage-taking") within the meaning of this Convention.

The third offense traces its origins to the 1988 Convention on the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Maritime Navigation (SUA), promulgated in the wake of the 1985 Achille Lauro attack (ship at left) undertaken by alleged Palestinian Liberation Front members who hijacked the ship to protest the incarceration of a group of Palestinians by Israel. In the course of the incident, a disabled Jewish tourist (Leon Klinghoffer) was brutally killed. (In a subsequent lawsuit, the cruise-line defendants impleaded the Palestinian Liberation Organization, which eventually settled the case after losing a motion to dismiss on foreign sovereign immunity and personal jurisdiction grounds. Klinghoffer v. S.N.C. Achille Lauro Ed Altri-Gestione, etc., 937 F.2d 44 (2d Cir. 1991)). The Achille Lauro attack, while called "piratical," fell outside the technical definition of piracy, because the attackers were passengers on board the ship (thus failing to two-vessel requirement of piracy) and they acted for political, rather than private, ends.

SUA defines its offense at Article 3(1) as follows:

Any person commits an offence if that person unlawfully and intentionally:

  1. seizes or exercises control over a ship by force or threat thereof or any
    other form of intimidation; or

  2. performs an act of violence against a person on board a ship if that act is
    likely to endanger the safe navigation of that ship; or

  3. destroys a ship or causes damage to a ship or to its cargo which is likely
    to endanger the safe navigation of that ship; or

  4. places or causes to be placed on a ship, by any means whatsoever, a device
    or substance which is likely to destroy that ship, or cause damage to that ship
    or its cargo which endangers or is likely to endanger the safe navigation of
    that ship; or * * *

  5. injures or kills any person, in connection with the commission or the
    attempted commission of any of the offences set forth in sub-paragraphs (a) to
    (f).
The victim ship must be in international transit to trigger SUA (Art. 4). Although many terrorism crimes are defined in terms of some surplus of intent or motive (usually to intimidate a civilian population or influence a government), neither of these two crimes contains such a requirement beyond the hijacking statute's vague compulsion element.

These terrorism crimes thus fill several of the gaps in the conventional definition of piracy, which requires two vessels (some commentators suggest that an attack by a skiff (right) doesn't count), the attack must occur on the the high seas or in a state's exclusive economic zone, and the attack must be for private ends. This point is emphasized in a recent case out of the 9th Circuit. In Lei Shi v. U.S., 525 F. 3d 709 (9th Cir. 2008), the defendant was prosecuted under section 2280 after he mutinied and took control of the ship in international waters off the coast of Hawaii. Lei Shi argued that the statute was unconstitutional as applied to him. The court ruled that the U.S. Constitution at §8, cl. 10 empowers Congress to define and punish piracies and felonies on the high seas and that §2280(a)(1)(A)-(B) defines an offense that meets the definition of piracy. Id. at 721. The defendant also claimed that there was an insufficient nexus between his acts and the United States, thus offending the 5th Amendment due process clause. The court ruled that due process requires a nexus only when international law requires such a nexus. The crime of piracy, it noted, first gave rise to the concept of universal jurisdiction and defendant was thus on notice that he could be prosecuted for his crimes in any nation-state in which he could be found. Id. at 724.

Muse has pled not guilty and will be tried as an adult, although his age is contested. Stay tuned!

On April 28

On this day in ....
... 1789 (220 years ago today), in the South Pacific, members of the crew of the HMS Bounty mutiny by seizing a sleeping Captain William Bligh and setting him and his allies adrift. As stated here: "For the next 48 days, Bligh and his men will battle hostile natives, ferocious storms, and dwindling provisions before arriving in Coupang, Dutch East Indies." As many a moviegoer knows, the mutineers eventually would sail the Bounty (above right) to, and settle on, Pitcairn Island. (image credit)
... 1987, the former U.N. Secretary-General and current President of Austria, Kurt Waldheim, was barred from entry into the United States by order of the U.S. Department of Justice. As The New York Times reported, DOJ "cited evidence that Mr. Waldheim [left] had '''participated in activities amounting to persecution' of Jews and others in Greece and Yugoslavia during World War II." "And throughout his later years," The Times reported in his 2007 obituary, "Mr. Waldheim portrayed himself as an ordinary citizen who had been caught up in a maelstrom."

(Prior April 28 posts are here and here.)

The Return of Piracy

My seven-year-old has become an avid reader of the New York Times. His inspiration? Piracy off the coast of Somalia.

We’ve all heard by now about the dramatic and almost unbelievable rescue of Captain Richard Phillips by Navy SEALs (choppy waters, night vision, three shots, three pirates down—it is the stuff of Hollywood). The United States has indicated that it will prosecute the one captured pirate in a U.S. court for the crimes of hostage taking and/or piracy.

Piracy is one of the oldest international crimes, and its international prohibition in many respects gave rise to the principle of universal jurisdiction. The concept that all states could prosecute the pirate was embodied in the 1958 Convention on the High Seas and its successor, the 1982 U.N. Convention in the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) (affectionately called “a constitution for the oceans”), which defines piracy at Article 101 as a phenomenon of the high seas:

Piracy consists of any of the following acts:

(a) any illegal acts of violence or detention, or any act of depredation, committed for private ends by the crew or the passengers of a private ship or a private aircraft, and directed:

(i) on the high seas, against another ship or aircraft, or against persons or property on board such ship or aircraft;

(ii) against a ship, aircraft, persons or property in a place outside the jurisdiction of any State;

(b) 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;

(c) any act of inciting or of intentionally facilitating an act described in subparagraph (a) or (b).

According to this definition, acts of violence or depredation that occur within a state’s territorial or internal waters are considered acts of armed robbery at sea within the territory of the littoral state rather than as piracy per se.

Both treaties also codified the customary principle of universal jurisdiction. Article 105 of UNCLOS reads:

On the high seas, or in any other place outside the jurisdiction of any State, every State may seize a pirate ship or aircraft, or a ship or aircraft taken by piracy and under the control of pirates, and arrest the persons and seize the property on board. The courts of the State which carried out the seizure may decide upon the penalties to be imposed, and may also determine the action to be taken with regard to the ships, aircraft or property, subject to the rights of third parties acting in good faith.

The phenomenon of piracy in the Gulf of Aden has sparked considerable and escalating U.N. Security Council activity. On June 2, 2008, the Council adopted Resolution 1816 under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, which—in characteristic diplo-speak—expressed grave concern about the threats posed by acts of piracy to humanitarian aid and commercial shipping and deplored recent attacks. It urged states interested in commercial maritime routes off the coast of Somalia to increase and coordinate their efforts to deter piracy in cooperation with the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia, the internationally recognized government of Somalia (such as it is) and the 14th attempt to create a functioning government since the fall of the Siad Barre regime in 1991. Most significantly, for a period of six months from the date of the resolution, the resolution permitted states cooperating with the TFG to enter Somali territorial waters to suppress acts of piracy (art. 7(a)) in a fashion that exceeds the traditional doctrine of hot pursuit (see Art. 111 of UNCLOS). States are also encouraged to cooperate in determining jurisdiction for the prosecution of persons responsible for acts of piracy and armed robbery off the coast of Somalia.

Subsequently, S.C. Resolution 1838 called upon states whose naval vessels and military aircraft operated in the region to use

the necessary means, in conformity with international law, … for the repression of piracy.

Resolution 1846 extended Resolution 1816 and also tied acts of piracy to the terrorism multilateral treaty regime by invoking the 1988 Convention for the Suppression f Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Maritime Navigation (SUA), promulgated in the wake of the Achille Lauro hijacking by the Palestine Liberation Front. Pursuant to Article 3, a person commits a breach of that that treaty if s/he:

(a) seizes or exercises control over a ship by force or threat thereof or any other form of intimidation; or

(b) performs an act of violence against a person on board a ship if that act is likely to endanger the safe navigation of that ship; or

(c) destroys a ship or causes damage to a ship or to its cargo which is likely to endanger the safe navigation of that ship; or

(d) places or causes to be placed on a ship, by any means whatsoever, a device or substance which is likely to destroy that ship, or cause damage to that ship or its cargo which endangers or is likely to endanger the safe navigation of that ship; or …

(g) injures or kills any person, in connection with the commission or the attempted commission of any of the offences set forth in subparagraphs (a) to (f).

That treaty embodies territorial (including flagship), nationality (both active and passive), and custodial jurisdiction.

Finally, S.C. Resolution 1851 extended the authority of states cooperating in the fight against piracy on land as well as sea, enabling states to

undertake all necessary measures that are appropriate in Somalia, for the purpose of suppressing acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea … provided, however, that any measures undertaken pursuant to the authority of this paragraph shall be undertaken consistent with applicable international humanitarian and human rights law.

All the Security Council resolutions emphasized that their authorizations are limited to the situation in Somalia and should not be considered as establishing customary international law. In the debates surrounding these resolutions, several states emphasized that the phenomenon of piracy could not be divorced from the humanitarian and political crisis within Somalia. They also noted that piracy is not just a problem for flag ships & private industry; 3.5 million people in Somalia are dependent on food aid, and the World Food Program’s maritime deliveries have been impacted by piracy.

Traditionally, the anti-piracy policy of the international community was one of deterrence rather than prosecution. Captured pirates were simply released, and private companies (or their insurance companies) would pay the necessary ransoms as a cost of doing business. As pirate attacks and ransom requests increase exponentially, however, states (including France, the Netherlands, and Kenya) are beginning to prosecute offenders. (The U.K. has so far refused to bring pirates to its territory out of fear they will raise asylum or non-refoulement claims).

Under U.S. law, pirates can be prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. § 1651, which provides that

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.

The Supreme Court determined that Congress constitutionally enacted the predecessor of this provision under its power

to define and punish piracies and felonies committed on the high seas, and offenses against law of nations.

U.S. Const., Art. I, § 8, cl. 10. See U.S. v. Smith, 18 U.S.C. 153 (1820). Subsequent sections of Title 18 set forth further refinements to this crime (e.g., arming of privateers, confederating with pirates, plunder of a distressed vessel, the receipt of pirated goods, etc.).

Pirates can also potentially be prosecuted for

  • acts of terrorism (18 U.S.C. § 2332b et seq.),
  • violence against maritime navigation (18 U.S.C. § 2280)
  • hostage-taking (18 U.S.C. § 1203) or
  • interfering with commerce by threats or violence (18 U.S.C. § 1951).

Unlike the piracy statute, these other statutes often require some nexus to the United States (e.g., the hostage was a U.S. citizen, the organization sought to be compelled is the U.S. government, or the goods were in transit from or to the U.S.).

Go On! Modern-Day Piracy Off Somalia

(Go On! is an occasional item on symposia of interest) An evening of discussion of international legal issues on the current situation of modern-day piracy -- entitled "Piracy Off the Coast of Somalia: Challenges to Deterrence, Pursuit, and Prosecution" -- is on hand from 5 to 7 p.m. Monday, March 2, at the University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law, Sacramento, California. Cosponsors of are Pacific McGeorge's Global Center for Business & Development and ASIL-West, a regional project of the American Society of International Law.
Opening the discussion moderated by Linda Carter (Pacific McGeorge) will be Fausto Pocar (left), the University of Milan international law professor who serves as a Judge on the Appeals Chamber for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, and who is the former President of the ICTY and a past member of the Human Rights Committee, the U.N. body that monitors compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Leading the ensuing open discussion will be ASIL-West Co-Chair David D. Caron (California-Berkeley), John Cary Sims (Pacific McGeorge), and IntLawGrrl Beth Van Schaack (Santa Clara).
Details and registration here.

On February 16

On this day in ...
... 1937, a synthetic fiber called "nylon" was patented by the E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. Inc. "One of the first consumer uses of this new wonder plastic was replacing hog bristles in tooth brushes," but the 2d consumer use, yarn for hosiery, so eclipsed it that to this day women's stockings are commonly called "nylons" (left).
... 1804 (205 years ago today), amid the Barbary Wars in which the United States battled pirates who assailed ships in the Mediterranean Sea, U.S. armed forces destroyed a U.S. ship that had run aground at Tripoli Harbor, in what's now Libya, after which it had been seized and hundreds aboard held captive. (image credit) Though this raid was a success, the months of military efforts to free the hostages were not. Eventually President Thomas Jefferson secured release by returning "Tripolitan captives" and paying $60,000.


(Prior February 16 posts are here and here.)

Sirius Piracy

Piracy will be drawing the attention of the international community to a much greater degree after last weekend's hijacking of the very large Saudi-owned, Liberia-flagged oil tanker, the Sirius Star. This is reported to be the biggest tanker ever to be successfully grabbed by pirates. (photo credit) The pirates overtook the ship and its crew while they were sailing off the Kenyan coast headed for the United States. Now, the pirates have anchored the Sirius Star off the Somali coast. The ship has been reported to be carrying $100 million of oil, as well as an international crew, including nationals of the Philippines, Croatia, Saudi Arabia, Poland, and the United Kingdom.
This seizure indicates the mounting capabilities of pirates in the region as well as the difficulty of stemming the growing tide of modern piracy.
Despite a multinational naval task force having been assembled earlier this year to address Somali piracy, there have been continued and increasingly troublesome hijackings in the region. The International Chamber of Commerce Commercial Crime Services' report on the incident includes this statement from Pottengal Mukundan, the ICC International Maritime Bureau (IMB) Director:

Although this is just the latest of a large spike in attacks off the east coast of Africa, this incident is significant on two counts. Firstly, this is the largest vessel to have been hijacked. Secondly, the distance from the shore would suggest a highly organised operation -- this is not mere opportunism.

The BBC reports that the IMB's Piracy Reporting Centre

said it had records of 92 attacks against vessels so far this year, including 36 successful hijackings. This month alone, pirates have seized a Japanese cargo ship off Somalia, a Chinese fishing boat off Kenya and a Turkish ship transporting chemicals off Yemen.
An interactive map of pirate activity in 2008 can be found here.

Security Council Resolves to Fight (Some) Piracy

As I mentioned in an earlier post about a French ship's run in with pirates in the Gulf of Aden, France asked the Security Council (right) for action, particularly in the form of “regular international surveillance” and changing the definition of "piracy" in the Law of the Sea Treaty to allow states to pursue pirates even in the coastal waters off Somalia. Earlier this month, acting under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, the Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1838, which authorizes states to take action against acts of piracy and armed robbery against vessels off the Somalian coast. Having determined
that the incidents of piracy and armed robbery against vessels in the territorial waters of Somalia and the high seas off the coast of Somalia exacerbate the situation in Somalia which continues to constitute a threat against international peace and security in the region,
the Security Council encourages states to deploy "naval vessels and military aircraft" in the area (photo credit). Leery of establishing a precedent, the Council clearly states that the Resolution applies only to Somalia and "underscores in particular that this resolution shall not be considered as establishing customary international law." Interesting.
Apparently, the Security Council was not willing to go as far as France had proposed: it authorizes military undertakings in Somalia's coastal waters to combat piracy as a tributary to or aggravating factor in the international-peace-threatening situation in Somalia, but the definition of "piracy" would still seem to limit the crime to acts on the high seas. Though piracy was the original threat to collective security, giving birth to universal jurisdiction and providing the model for actions against today's perpetrators of international crimes, it no longer seems to be considered as such. Instead, in this particular situation, it is a hook for a sort of externalized R2P--we intervene at water's edge to protect our interests on the theory that this will improve, or at least help keep from worsening, the situation within Somalia.

'Nuff said

(Occasional item taking context-optional note of thought-provoking quotes)


The pirates are highly organized. They work in teams. There is even a pirate spokesman (who could not be reached for comment on Friday).

-- Jeffrey Gettleman, in a New York Times article about 21st C. piracy, a phenomenon on which IntLawGrrls often has posted.
Think my 16th C. transnational foremother had her own advance team?


On September 6

On this day in ...
... 1593 (415 years ago today), in London, my transnational foremother, Grace O’Malley, met, as depicted at right, with England's Queen Elizabeth I. Grace, whose name in Irish is Gráinne Ni Mháille, is said to have extracted concessions permitting her to continue her trade -- piracy -- on the west coast of Ireland.
... 1965, declaring an intention "to prevent a direct attack by Pakistani forces" against it, India ordered its troops to invade West Pakistan, in movements that seemed to be directed at the city of Lahore. A ceasefire would be declared 3 weeks later. The boundary set in the ceasefire has been dubbed the "Line of Control." The dispute over this region continues to this day. (map credit)

Human rights for hostes humanis?

Since the time of Grotius, a pirate has been considered to be hostis humanis generis, an enemy of mankind.

So write Ilias Bantekas and Susan Nash in their book International Criminal Law (2003). As a global enemy, the pirate was subject to prosecution in any country that managed to exercise jurisdiction over him -- or, in the case of pirates like my IntLawGrrls transnational foremother Grace O'Malley -- her. (credit)
Thus it's a bit of a surprise to read that Britain, the country that once claimed to rule the waves, is shirking from seizure of the 21st C. pirates about whom IntLawGrrl Naomi Norberg posted earlier this month. London's Sunday Times of London reported that the Foreign Office has instructed the Royal Navy "not to detain pirates because doing so may breach their human rights." The Times' Marie Woolf reports of the further concern regarding the "risk that captured pirates could claim asylum in Britain." This fear of inability to return the captives likely stems from Britain's non-refoulement obligations, explicit in treaty provisions such as Article 33 of the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and Article 3 of the Convention Against Torture, and deemed implicit in provisions such as Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights:


The Foreign Office has advised that pirates sent back to Somalia could have their human rights breached because, under Islamic law, they face beheading for murder or having a hand chopped off for theft.

Not all Britons share this view. The Times quoted Julian Brazier, a Conservative Member of Parliament:
'These people commit horrendous offences. The solution is not to turn a blind eye but to turn them over to the local authorities. The convention on human rights quite rightly doesn’t cover the high seas. It’s a pathetic indictment of what our legal system has come to.'

No doubt the notion that even hostes humanis have human rights also will trouble those who would use the old rule of free-rein-to-fight-pirates as a template for today's treatment of persons caught up in what the Bush Administration calls its "Global War on Terror."

(Cross-posted at Slate's Convictions blog. Subsequently, co-bloggers Benjamin Wittes posted this response, and Deborah Pearlstein this reply. Thanks to Berkeley Law student Lindsay M. Harris for the head's up on the Times story.)

The Jolly Roger Still Flies

Much of the world is familiar with Grace O’Malley (transnational foremother of IntLawGrrl Diane Marie Amann), Jack Sparrow and Long John Silver, and those who’ve delved into the history of the Alien Tort Claims Act (or Statute) (see our ATCA posts here) know well the importance of piracy to universal jurisdiction. But today’s pirates seem to have gone largely unmentioned in the mainstream press, despite their having taken some 3200 sailors hostage over the last 10 years, which they’ve ransomed for millions of dollars (paid by the shipowners). In fact, total worldwide losses due to commercial vessel piracy are estimated at USD 13-16 billion per year. Just a little over a week ago, for example, Somalian farmers cum pirates took control of a French luxury liner, the Ponant, in the Gulf of Aden. The passengers had been dropped off and the ship was taken after it pulled out of port, as are many ships in this Gulf, where they’d apparently have to be racing along at 200 nautical miles/hour to escape capture. The 22-member crew was hostaged for a reported $2 million, but the French military operation managed to net 6 of 13 pirates and some of the booty. The legal questions now are: where will these 6 pirates be tried and how should such cases be handled in the future? International maritime law does not provide a complete answer: a state seizing a ship from pirates is authorized to prosecute the pirates (indeed, the law of nations upon which the ATCA was built required states to prosecute alleged pirates and put them to death if convicted). However, these 6 pirates were captured on land, in Somalia, then taken aboard a French vessel. The transitional government in Somalia is apparently not contesting France’s going ahead with prosecution, but France is proposing both Security Council action to provide not only “regular international surveillance” and a right to hot pursuit in the waters off Somalia, but also a revision of the definition of piracy contained in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Article 101 of that treaty defines piracy as occurring on the “high seas,” thus not in a state's territorial waters (a 12-mile-wide stretch off the coast). But poor states unable to take the measures necessary to combat piracy in their territorial waters may be willing to cede sovereignty over these waters, at least with respect to pirate patrols. Now, I realize it would be useless to sue a penniless pirate, but why after 10 years of hostage taking and ransom collecting have none of these people been sued under the ATCA? Has the ransom always been recovered or returned as part of the criminal process? Or, hard to believe, are these 6 Somalians the first modern pirates to be captured?

Good night, Gracie*

Even the best of deeds has unintended consequences, and so it is with IntLawGrrls' makeover.
On completing the switchover to our own names, discovered that all our prior posts had been transformed as well. To a new reader to the blog, it'll look as if we've all always written in our own names -- and not in the name of a transnational foremother, as we did for nearly a year. The sole exception is Eleanor Roosevelt. There's a technical reason for that, but we at IntLawGrrls prefer to think that it's because Eleanor simply must remain as an inspiration to us all.
Sadly, my own namesake fell prey to the technological erasure. Can't let her go without this tribute:
For centuries Gráinne Ni Mháille -- to anglophones, Grace O'Malley -- has enjoyed renown as The Pirate Queen. Earning that title was no small thing in the time and place that she lived, 1530 to 1603, in a castle on Clare Island that accepts visitors to this day. Legend has it that O'Malley overcame male prejudice to control a swath of the West of Ireland. She fought off an attack at sea while nursing her day-old son, and wrested from England's Queen Elizabeth I a concession to ply her pirates' trade along Ireland's Atlantic coast. (Am I mistaken, or is that the original ER bowing to Grace in the print at right?) In all this, of course, O'Malley proved herself an early and powerful nonstate actor.
Tales of her exploits still are told today, in children's books and travelogues, in songs like "Grace O'Malley" and "Óró sé do bheatha 'bhaile," in theaters on both sides of the pond, even on MySpace. Given the status of women in 16th C. Ireland, the tales may be taller than the reality, but they inspire nonetheless.
A heartfelt Go raibh maith agat to Grace, who'll remain honored in my profile and perched on my shoulder as I post in my own name.


* Know the origin of this catchphrase? If so, you're either: (a) Partial to Mid-20th Century Television; or (b) a Person of a Certain Age. No need to say which it is...
 
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