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Singapore Strait leads world in maritime crime incidents in 2023
来源:shippingazette 编辑:编辑部 发布:2023/07/19 17:25:00
THE Singapore Strait saw the world's largest number of reported piracy and armed robbery attempts in the first half of the year, though most were low-level crimes, reports Bloomberg.
The Singapore Strait saw a 25 per cent increase in reported cases. The incidents involving 20 vessels in the congested waterway are considered to be opportunistic crimes, typically occurring at night with one or more groups targetting passing ships - including tugs and barges - to rob them.
The Gulf of Guinea on Africa's West Coast saw a "concerning surge" in more serious incidents during the half, according to the report, rising to nine in the second quarter from five in the first three months. Fourteen seamen were kidnapped in the Gulf, of which eight were taken from vessels anchored within territorial waters.
In two separate hijackings in the region, 31 crew members were held hostage, communication and navigation equipment were destroyed, and partial cargoes were stolen.
Globally, 65 incidents of piracy and armed robbery against ships were reported in the first half of 2023, an increase from 58 in the year-earlier period, according to data from the International Maritime Bureau, a division of the International Chamber of Commerce focused on maritime crimes.
Slightly more than half of the incidents - 33 - took place in Southeast Asia, with Africa accounting for 14 and the Americas for 13. Most of the ships that were targetted were bulk carriers, container ships and tankers.
The Singapore Strait saw a 25 per cent increase in reported cases. The incidents involving 20 vessels in the congested waterway are considered to be opportunistic crimes, typically occurring at night with one or more groups targetting passing ships - including tugs and barges - to rob them.
The Gulf of Guinea on Africa's West Coast saw a "concerning surge" in more serious incidents during the half, according to the report, rising to nine in the second quarter from five in the first three months. Fourteen seamen were kidnapped in the Gulf, of which eight were taken from vessels anchored within territorial waters.
In two separate hijackings in the region, 31 crew members were held hostage, communication and navigation equipment were destroyed, and partial cargoes were stolen.
Globally, 65 incidents of piracy and armed robbery against ships were reported in the first half of 2023, an increase from 58 in the year-earlier period, according to data from the International Maritime Bureau, a division of the International Chamber of Commerce focused on maritime crimes.
Slightly more than half of the incidents - 33 - took place in Southeast Asia, with Africa accounting for 14 and the Americas for 13. Most of the ships that were targetted were bulk carriers, container ships and tankers.