International Maritime Bureau (IMB) figures show a rise in piracy and armed robbery on the world's seas in the first nine months of 2020, with a 40 per cent increase in the number of kidnappings reported in the Gulf of Guinea, compared with the same period in 2019.
Pirates armed with guns and knives are abducting bigger groups of seafarers at further distances off the West African coast.
The IMB's latest global piracy report details 132 attacks since the start of 2020, up from 119 incidents in the same period last year. Of the 85 seafarers kidnapped from their vessels and held for ransom, 80 were taken in the Gulf of Guinea – in 14 attacks reported off Nigeria, Benin, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, and Ghana.
In the first nine months of 2020, seafarers reported 134 cases of assault, injury and threats, including 85 crewmembers being kidnapped and 31 held hostage onboard their ships. A total of 112 vessels were boarded and six were fired upon, while 12 reported attempted attacks.
Two fishing vessels were hijacked, both in the Gulf of Guinea.
Gulf of Guinea remains the world's piracy hotspot
With approximately 95 per cent of global kidnappings reported from within Gulf of Guinea waters, the IMB warns that pirate gangs in the area are "well organised and targeting all vessel types over a wide range."
The furthest attack from shore also involved the most crew kidnapped from a single vessel in 2020.
On July 17, eight pirates armed with machine guns boarded a product tanker underway around 196 nautical miles southwest of Bayelsa, Nigeria. They held all 19 crewmembers hostage, stole ship's documents and valuable items, and escaped with 13 kidnapped crew.
The tanker was left drifting with limited and unqualified navigational and engine crew onboard. A nearby merchant vessel later helped the tanker to sail to a safe port.
Regional authorities were notified and the 13 kidnapped crewmembers were released safely one month later.
A more recent example was on September 8, when armed pirates attacked a refrigerated cargo ship underway around 33 nautical miles south‐southwest of Lagos, Nigeria. Two crewmembers were kidnapped, but the rest of the crew managed to retreat into the citadel – one of the industry's recommended best practices endorsed by IMB.
A Nigerian naval team was dispatched. The navy personnel then boarded, conducted a search, and then escorted the ship to a safe anchorage for investigations.
Knife attacks in Singapore Straits
The piracy centre recorded 15 attacks to ships underway in the Singapore Straits. While most are considered low level crimes, two crew were threatened, one injured and another taken hostage, indicating a continued risk to the crew.
Knives were reported in at least ten of the incidents.
Indonesia brighter
There has been a sharp quarterly decrease in the number of incidents within the Indonesian archipelagic, with four reported in the third quarter of 2020, down from 14 in the second quarter. These are viewed as low level opportunistic thefts with most reported on anchored vessels.
South and Central America incidents
All vessel types in in the Caribbean, Central and South America – including Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Haiti, Mexico and Peru – are being targeted at anchor as well as underway, and during river passages under pilotage.
On September 26, a container vessel was boarded by armed perpetrators during its river passage at Guayaquil. The attackers fired their weapons towards the accommodation and bridge, then opened containers and stole the contents before leaving.
Somali piracy remains under control
No incidents of piracy have been reported around Somalia since 2018. In August 2020, pirates freed the last three of the thousands of hostages who have been held captive in the region over the years since ship hijackings peaked in 2011.
Despite this, as Somali pirates are still capable of carrying out further attacks, the IMB urges vessels to continue implementing the industry's best management practices (BMP5), and encourages the continued, stabilising presence of navies in the region.