Gulf of Guinea Kidnappings by Pirates Rise 40%

Libby George
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Illustration only - Pirates in Africa - Credit: U.S. Navy/Wikimedia

Kidnappings rose by 40% in the Gulf of Guinea in the first nine months of this year, and the region off West Africa's coast now accounts for 95% of global maritime kidnappings, the International Maritime Bureau (IMB) said on Wednesday.

Eighty seafarers were taken in the Gulf of Guinea, a 2.3 million sq km (888,000 sq m) area bordering more than a dozen countries, sharply up from the same period in 2019, and the pirates are attacking further out to sea than before, the IMB said.

Pirates armed with guns and knives attack everything from oil platforms to fishing vessels and refrigerated cargo ships. In one attack 95 nautical miles off the coast, the furthest offshore attack reported in the region, pirates took 13 crew hostage, which the IMB said illustrated "how well-organized and far-reaching" the pirates are.

Experts say the bulk of the attackers come from Nigeria's Niger Delta, which produces most of the petroleum from the country, Africa's largest oil exporter, but the restive region has an underdeveloped economy and limited jobs for locals.

In 2019, Nigeria enacted a standalone law against piracy, and in August, a court in the oil hub of Port Harcourt made the first convictions under the legislation.


(Reporting By Libby George, Editing by William Maclean)

Categories: Energy Maritime Safety Vessels Industry News Activity Africa Safety and Security

Related Stories

Appraisal Well Confirms Bourdon’s Potential for New Development Cluster off Gabon

Appraisal Well Confirms Bourdon’s Potential for New Development Cluster off Gabon

Strategic Marine Delivers Another Fast Crew Boat to Truth Marine Services

Strategic Marine Delivers Another Fast Crew Boat to Truth Marine Services

Kim Heng’s Rebuilt Geotechnical Survey Vessel Sets Sail

Kim Heng’s Rebuilt Geotechnical Survey Vessel Sets Sail

Current News

SubCtech ESS Revolutionizes Onshore, Offshore Power

ScottishPower's Monopile Installation Sets Foundation for Record-Breaking Offshore Windfarm

Van Oord Expands its Trencher Fleet

SLB Misses Profit Estimates for First Quarter of 2025

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News

Offshore Engineer Magazine