Yemen faces Qaeda, pirate threats in vital strait
On a rocky volcanic outcrop set in the deep and treacherous waters of
a vital strait linking Europe to Asia, Yemen’s coastguard is building a
base to help secure one of the world’s busiest waterways. Somali pirates
trawl the sea south of the Bab al-Mandab strait off Yemen’s coast, and
in recent months have stepped up attacks on tankers, cargo ships and
fishing vessels in defiance of a major crackdown by navies from at least
a dozen countries.
But Yemen has deeper worries about security off its coast after a
resurgent al Qaeda arm called for a blockade of the strait between the
Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, through which 25,000 ships — 7 percent of
world shipping — pass each year. “The geographical nature of Bab al-Mandab,
of the coast and the land, its beaches and islands, makes it very
sensitive security-wise,” Mohamed Mubarak bin Aefan, head of Aden port
management, told Reuters.
Militants would struggle to block the strategic strait, experts say,
but the shipping industry is still worried about possible attacks off
Yemen’s southwest coast. A Yemeni official said France was helping it
build the base with the hope it would have a dual use in combating both
piracy and al Qaeda.
Yemen has seen its ports and waters targeted before.
The U.S. government warned ships sailing off Yemen’s coast in March
of a risk of al Qaeda attacks similar to a suicide bombing of the U.S.
warship Cole in 2000 that killed 17 U.S. sailors in Aden’s port. Two
years later, al Qaeda hit a French supertanker in the Gulf of Aden,
south of Bab al-Mandab.
Worries over the strait, through which around 3 million barrels of
oil bound for Europe and the United States are shipped daily, were
further stirred when Yemen boosted security on its coast against
possible militant attacks.
Yemen became a top Western security concern after a resurgent Yemeni
al Qaeda arm claimed a failed bomb attack on a U.S.-bound plane in
December, so alarming Washington that it has cranked up security
assistance to the impoverished country.
In another bold attack in June that Yemen blamed on al Qaeda, gunmen
killed 11 people at the southern regional headquarters of a Yemeni
intelligence agency in Aden, the deadliest attack in Yemen since the
Cole bombing.
But the group’s call earlier this year for a blockade of Bab al-Mandab
to cut off U.S. shipments to Israel does not mean al Qaeda is capable of
such an operation, said Jim Cameron, senior analyst at Stirling Assynt.
“It’s certainly a real threat although I think it’s probably more an
aspiration rather than a capability at the moment.”
In addition, it would not be easy to completely close off the 22-km
(14-mile) strait, experts say.
“The strait is wide and the currents are strong and complex, so it
would be difficult to actually block it in a physical sense,” said Roy
Facey, port adviser to the Port of Aden.
“A Yemen coastguard base to support maritime interventions, and the
ability of Yemeni forces to control any high land overlooking the strait
gives me a lot of confidence that the threats we hear of would be very
difficult to implement.”
But calls to close Bab al-Mandab still impact sentiment in the
region’s shipping industry, reeling from pirate attacks, said Hisham al-Saqaf,
general manager of shipping and marine services firm Gulf Agency Company
(GAC) Yemen.
“I don’t know how they would do it but of course this is a threat and
ship owners take these things seriously,” he said.
While Yemen’s Western allies and neighbouring oil exporter Saudi
Arabia fear al Qaeda is exploiting instability on several fronts in
Yemen for attacks in the region and beyond, piracy is the most burning
concern for the shipping industry.
Somali pirates are making millions of dollars in ransoms by seizing
ships, including tankers and dry bulkers, in the Gulf of Aden and the
Indian Ocean. More than 15 ships and hundreds of sailors are being held
off Somalia.
So far, Somalia’s al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab rebels have not been
directly involved in piracy, which has flourished in the absence of a
strong government and lawlessness in the Horn of Africa nation.
Business in the region’s ports has been badly hit and shipping lines
are having to fork out millions of dollars in higher insurance rates,
extra security costs and elevated crews’ wages, all this despite the
strong international naval presence.
The United States estimates that every day some 30 to 40 warships are
involved in counter-piracy efforts from the EU, NATO and the United
States as well as China, Russia, India, Malaysia, South Korea and Japan.
Serious security threats to ships at the Bab al-Mandab waterway would
have global implications for the industry and could prompt an even
stronger international military intervention, industry experts say.
The GAC’s Saqaf, whose tanker business is 50 percent down compared to
2008, said the naval intervention had improved security, but more needed
to be done.
“At the end of the day I want a peaceful passage, a peaceful waterway
for ships to sail and to come to our ports. We need the business,” he
said.
The number of ships calling in Aden Port has fallen around 11 percent
this year from 2008, bin Aefan said.
Dubai-based port operator DP World, which runs a container port in
Aden, says there was no major impact on container lines but that piracy
was a business worry.
“The business that we are in — the transhipment trade — is very, very
competitive. Everyone wants a piece of it, from Aden to Muscat, Dubai
and Jeddah, so any disadvantage we have against other ports is a concern
to us,” said Arthur Flynn, deputy general manager of the Aden Container
Terminal.
Aden Port’s bin Aefan said the problem of piracy could only be
resolved if stability returned to the pirates’ countries of origin and
that the international community should be more aware of the possible
dangers facing Bab al-Mandab.
“International and political efforts need to be aimed at the root
causes and need to include an understanding of the dangerous situation
this global waterway is in.”
Reuters |