…Dakuku assures of zero tolerance to piracy in Gulf of Guinea
By Sunday Okobi with agency report
The Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, has
disclosed that the federal government has approved an Integrated National
Security Strategy (INSS) for the Nigerian maritime sector.
According to him, the strategy which will be
implemented in collaboration with other countries in the Gulf of Guinea (GoG) is
aimed to stem the tide of insecurity on the region’s territorial waterways.
Amaechi, who made this known during a paper
presentation titled: ‘Nigeria’s role in responding to the causes and consequences
of maritime insecurity’ at the Royal Institute of International Affairs,
Chatham House, London in United Kingdom, stated further that the Nigerian
Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) is already implementing a
comprehensive maritime strategy in collaboration with other partners in order
to enhance the fight against piracy attacks in the region.
Speaking further, Amaechi noted that NIMASA had
established a command and control centre for enhanced situation awareness,
response capability, law enforcement and regional cooperation among others, all
geared towards an enhanced water security and by extension, the entire country.
The minister also used the opportunity to assure
the international community that the anti-piracy bill which is currently before
the National Assembly would hopefully be passed before the end of this
legislative year.
On his part, the Director General of NIMASA, Dr.
Dakuku Peterside, who also delivered a paper at theChatham House, London,
titled: ‘The problem of maritime insecurity in the Gulf of Guinea is real…’,
noted that the agency through collaboration with other relevant government
bodies is leaving no stone unturned in ensuring zero tolerance to all forms of
piracy and illegalities on the country’s territorial waterways and the entire
Gulf of Guinea.
The director-general also noted that the Federal
Government of Nigeria has adopted a multi-dimensional interventional approach
to tackle the issues relating to piracy namely: legal/legislative approach
through the pushing of the enactment of the anti-piracy law, proper policy
framework through presidential intervention on maritime security to build regional
coalition and corporation; regulatory and operational approach through
effective enforcement of port and flagged state control and a Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) with the Nigerian Navy and Air Force to increase response
capacity among others.
Speaking further, he also highlighted four
strategic pillars the agency has adopted to tackle the issue of piracy tagged: ‘Total
Spectrum Maritime Strategy: namely, situational awareness, law enforcement,
response capability and regional cooperation all aimed at achieving a virile
and robust maritime sector.
Peterside, who is the current Chairman of the
Association of African Maritime Administrations (AAMA), also assured the
international community that NIMASA would continue to collaborate with other
relevant bodies both locally and internationally in order to realise its vision
of a prosperous maritime sector in Nigeria and the West and Central Africa sub-region.
While calling for continuous collaboration among partners
across different continents, the NIMASA DG noted that improved profiling and
information sharing on maritime criminality and illegality, enhanced maritime
domain awareness and surface to air patrol capabilities, functional legal
framework, integration of national inter-agency efforts, youth empowerment
programmes among others are factors that can help bring solutions to the issues
surrounding insecurity in the maritime space.
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