Off the Deck

Off the Deck
Showing posts with label International Maritime Bureau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Maritime Bureau. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 06, 2021

Crimes Against Shipping in 2021 to Date

The ICC's International Maritime Bureau provides an invaluable source of locating the "hot spots" of criminal and other activity affecting shipping at its IMB Piracy & Armed Robbery Map 2021, from which these screenshots are taken:

Overview - the key at the top pertains to all images below.


Southeast Asia


Singapore Strait


Africa/Middle East


Gulf of Guinea Region


Americas and Caribbean


If you are interested in reading the reports which generate these maps the IMB's Live Piracy & Armed Robbery Report 2021 maintains a running log of all such events.

The IMB is to be commended for its excellent work in this area, amd reminds that piracy and sea robbery and other threats to shipping are an on-going problem.

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Sea Piracy, Maritime Armed Robbery and Crew Kidnappings 2016 Report from the IMB

The invaluable International Maritime Bureau (of the International Chamber of Commerce's Commercial Crime Services) has issued a year end summary of crimes that affect merchant shipping and the crews that serve on such vessels in its ICC IMB report 2016. Bottom line - sea piracy down, crew kidnappings up:
In its 2016 report, IMB recorded 191 incidents of piracy and armed robbery on the world's seas.
"The continued fall in piracy is good news, but certain shipping routes remain dangerous, and the escalation of crew kidnapping is a worrying trend in some emerging areas," said Pottengal Mukundan, Director of IMB whose Piracy Reporting Centre (PRC) has monitored world piracy since 1991.
"The kidnappings in the Sulu Seas between eastern Malaysia and the Philippines are a particular concern," he added.
Worldwide in 2016, 150 vessels were boarded, 12 vessels were fired upon, seven were hijacked, and 22 attacks were thwarted. The number of hostages fell to 151.
Maritime kidnappings, however, showed a threefold increase on 2015. Pirates kidnapped 62 people for ransom in 15 separate incidents in 2016. Just over half were captured off West Africa, while 28 were kidnapped from tugs, barges, fishing boats, and more recently merchant ships, around Malaysia and Indonesia.