Egypt calls meetings to discuss stopping piracy
November 21 12:05:03 PM, LA Times
Egypt, which makes $5 billion a year in Suez Canal passage fees, meets with other nations boarding the Red Sea to address ways to stop brazen hijackers.
Worried that piracy could scare ships away from the Suez Canal, Egypt today held emergency talks with nations bordering the Red Sea on how stop brazen Somali gunmen from hijacking oil tankers and other vessels.
The Cairo meeting was called amid concerns that lawlessness was disrupting sea lanes and creating panic that might force shipping companies to avoid sailing the Red Sea region. Such a scenario would hurt the Egyptian economy, which relies on more than $5 billion a year in fees collected from vessels passing through the Suez Canal.
Complete coverage of Somali pirates
Live Piracy Map: International...
World grapples with pirate problem
Indian warship destroys suspected pirate vessel
Ships held by Somali pirates
The scourge of pirates comes as the Middle East is increasingly sensitive to the global financial crisis, which has pushed oil below $50 a barrel and is depressing markets and affecting trade, real estate and other businesses. Fewer freighters coming through the region would further strain countries linked to transportation and oil and could spark social and political unrest.
Diplomats from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Sudan and Jordan balanced their concerns over chaos on the seas with assurances to respect the sovereignty of the troubled government of Somalia, a country in the Horn of Africa scarred by civil war and rife with buccaneers, militants and.
A statement released after today's meeting did not suggest the delegates had come up with any immediate solutions. It said the diplomats "expressed the anxiety of Arab states overlooking the Red Sea toward the growth of the phenomenon of piracy. . . . Piracy off the Somali coast is one of the consequences of the deterioration of the political, security and humanitarian situation in Somalia."
Egyptian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossam Zaki was quoted by the state news agency as saying: "All options are open." He added that Egypt's national security agencies will decide "whether a diplomatic and political solution would be preferred."
The Red Sea nations also faced the prospect of how end a standoff with pirates who on Saturday captured a 1,000-foot tanker carrying $100 million worth of Saudi crude. The bandits anchored the ship off the Somali coast and are holding the crew hostage.
The gunmen reportedly are negotiating with Saudi officials and are demanding $25 million to release the Sirius Star and its crew.
"We are not talking here about conventional pirates but about organized gangs who have a lot of money, weapons and demonstrate organizational abilities and good knowledge of ship technology that allow them to catch ships quickly," said Mohammed Abdel Salam, a national security expert with Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies.
Zipping around in swift rubber boats and brandishing automatic weapons, Somali pirates have seized at least 80 ships off the Horn of Africa this year. The tactics have made perilous the shipping routes in the Gulf of Aden off Yemen that lead to the Red Sea, the Suez Canal and finally the Mediterranean. In October, Egypt collected $467.5 million in shipping fees from the canal.
If these fees are jeopardized, "Egyptian prestige will also be undermined because a failure to protect such a strategic resource would prove that Egypt has a very limited regional and military leverage," said Salam. "If we fail to counter this piracy and companies realize that countries along the Red Sea cannot protect the waterways, the impact will be tremendous."
The Red Sea nations, especially Egypt and Saudi Arabia, were expected to discuss the possibility of joint naval and military operations to secure the seas. The U.S., India, Russia and European nations have naval forces patrolling the near the Gulf of Aden.
"The phenomenon is threatening navigation in the Red Sea, causing some vessels to take other routes," Zaki was quoted as saying.
Fleishman is a Times staff writer.
jeffrey.fleishman@latimes.com
Noha El-Hennawy of The Times' Cairo bureau contributed to this report.
Legoland's own small world
The recently upgraded park offers a gentle intro for younger children. But bring your plastic -- costs stack up fast. Photos | Video
Holiday guide
Prepare for the holidays this year. Find deals and packages for travel, gifts, restaurants and events.
Save over 50% off the newsstand price. Click here to subscribe to The Times.
// JavaScript Document
if (navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Firefox")>-1){
aa=document.body.getElementsByTagName("h1");
if (aa.length>0){
if (aa[0].className=="orgurl" && aa[0].childNodes[0].tagName=="A") {
aa[0].childNodes[0].style.color="#666";
aa[0].childNodes[0].style.textDecoration="#666";
aa[0].childNodes[0].style.cursor="default";
}
}
}
Email
|
Print
|
Text
|
RSS
Most Viewed
Most E-mailed
Related articles
- Robert Rubin quits Citigroup amid criticism
Reuters - Robert Rubin, a former Treasury Secretary, resigned from Citigroup Inc on Friday following months of criticism of his performance at the giant U.S. bank, whose sinking share price led to a government… - TVA: Leaky pipe to blame for Ala. plant accident
AP - A retention pond at a Tennessee Valley Authority coal-burning power plant leaked waste into a northeast Alabama creek Friday, putting more pressure on utility officials who are already trying to clean… - In Indiana, protesters keep giving peace a chance
Once a week for seven years, members of the Bloomington Peace Action Coalition have gathered to protest war. As they see it, the election of Barack Obama has not helped their cause.
… - U.N., Red Cross curtail aid in Gaza
The aid groups suspend their staffers' movements in the territory, citing danger from Israeli attacks. The U.N. Security Council calls for an immediate cease-fire.
… - Northwest floodwaters recede; cleanup begins
AP - State officials began reopening Washington's major highways on Friday as floodwaters receded and road crews plowed away mud, snow and debris. But flooding continued on some major rivers, and residents… - Taylor's son gets 97 years in prison for torture
AP - Charles McArthur Emmanuel, the son of former Liberian President Charles Taylor and head of a savage paramilitary unit known as the "Demon Forces," was sentenced Friday to 97 years in prison for torture… - Rare 'dinky' bird migrates to US for first time
AP - Birders with binoculars and cameras are flocking to a remote state park in search of a small yellow-chested bird that apparently crossed the U.S. border for the first time from its high-mountain habitat… - Obama says jobs report shows need for fact action on stimulus package
'We can't ... drag this out,' the president-elect says in the wake of December's big jump in unemployment. Obama adds that he is willing to accept 'good ideas' from Congress.
… - Alabama sheriff to give up profits from jail food
AP - An Alabama sheriff imprisoned after admitting he legally pocketed about $210,000 from his jail kitchen while providing skimpy meals to inmates agreed to give up future profits from the operation,… - The struggles of being laid off for the first time
AP - Behind the latest unemployment figures showing another 500,000-plus Americans lost their jobs is a sad truth: The deeper the recession becomes, the more it touches people whose livelihoods have never… - Fla. conservatives fight transgender restroom rule
AP - A blond girl heads from a playground into a women's restroom. A scruffy man, lurking outside, darts in behind her. "Your City Commission Made This Legal," the words on the TV screen read. - Gov. Rod Blagojevich impeached by Illinois House
As expected, state legislators vote 114 to 1 to make Blagojevich the first Illinois governor to be impeached. He insists he's innocent and says he will keep fighting for the people of his state.
… - Job losses hit 2.6 million as layoff pain deepens
AP - A staggering 2.6 million jobs disappeared in 2008, the most since World War II, and the pain is only getting worse with 11 million Americans out of work and searching. Unemployment hit a 16-year high… - Obama delivers his spymasters, and a reminder: 'The United States does not torture'
As Barack Obama formally introduces Dennis Blair and Leon Panetta as his picks for key intelligence posts, he reiterates his opposition to interrogation techniques used during the Bush administration.
… - Baltimore mayor indicted on theft, perjury charges
AP - Mayor Sheila Dixon was indicted Friday on charges that she accepted illegal gifts during her time as mayor and City Council president, including travel, fur coats and gift cards intended for the poor… - Mexico declares social security agency the king of red tape
Mexico stages an unpopularity contest, and its Social Security Institute wins. The point was to search through the government's benighted bureaucracies to find the most useless process.
… - Palin: Is Kennedy getting 'kid glove' treatment?
AP - She messed up her first interviews, didn't show much of a grasp of the issues and, dontcha know, had a speech pattern that was widely mimicked. - Driver with 37 guns, ammo arrested at LA airport
AP - A motorist with 30 handguns, seven rifles and fully loaded ammunition magazines in his pickup truck has been arrested at Los Angeles International Airport. - Defiant Israel presses Gaza offensive as toll passes 800
AFP - Tanks and warplanes pounded Gaza on Friday after Israel defied a truce order from the UN Security Council as the death toll from the two-week-old conflict against Hamas passed 800. - Illinois House votes to impeach Gov. Blagojevich
Reuters - The Illinois House of Representatives impeached Gov. Rod Blagojevich on Friday for abuse of power, including a charge that he tried to sell President-elect Barack Obama's former U.S. Senate seat. - Durbin: Senate won't seat Burris without signature
AP - U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin says Roland Burris won't be accepted as President-elect Barack Obama's replacement in Senate without the Illinois secretary of state's signature. - Boston fire truck smashes into building; 1 dead
AP - A Boston Fire Department ladder truck coming down a hill plowed through an intersection Friday and crashed into a high-rise apartment building, killing one firefighter and injuring several other people. - Israel, Hamas ignore U.N. cease-fire resolution
The two sides continue their attacks as the conflict enters its 14th day. Eleven Israelis and more than 770 Palestinians have been killed.
… - Ill. House impeaches gov, who vows to fight on
AP - Gov. Rod Blagojevich was impeached Friday by Illinois lawmakers furious that he turned state government into a "freak show," setting the stage for an unprecedented trial in the state Senate that could…