Dakuku Peterside
The
Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety
Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has declared Nigeria’s
unwavering commitment to its leadership role in the war on piracy and
maritime crimes in the Gulf of Guinea region, an area widely
considered the global challenging maritime crime base in Africa.
Dakuku
made the declaration in a keynote address he delivered at a symposium
on Security in the Gulf of Guinea (GoG) at the headquarters of the
International Maritime Organisation (IMO) in London.
The
meeting was jointly organised by IMO, Baltic and International
Maritime Council (BIMCO), International Marine Contractors
Association (IMCA), International Transport Workers' Federation
(ITF), Oil Companies International Marine Forum (OCIMF), and the
International Chamber of Shipping. It had in attendance MDs and CEO’s
of top multinational shipping, oil and gas, and logistics firms.
Dakuku
said the GoG countries were facing serious security challenges that
had affected their economies severely and, therefore, needed global
support and cooperation to tackle the problem.
He,
however, said the location of the Gulf of Guinea held enormous
advantages, as it holds a significant percentage of the world’s
total oil and gas reserves as well as rich deposits of solid
minerals, such as diamond, bitumen, copper, uranium, granite, quartz,
lead, fluorite, and marble.
Already,
Nigeria has committed to the hosting of a Global Maritime Security
Conference (GMSC), which comes up in the country’s capital, Abuja,
from October 7 to 9.
Dakuku
stated that the conference will afford the international community a
platform to develop actionable strategies to put an end to piracy and
other security threats in the African geological and maritime region.
The
NIMASA DG, who is also Chairman of the Association of African
Maritime Administrations (AAMA), noted that the Gulf of Guinea
occupied a strategic location in international seaborne trade. It is
home to two regional economic blocs: Economic Community of Central
African States (ECCAS) and Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS), comprising 26 countries.
“It
is, therefore, seen as a resource provider and critical contributor
to national growth and prosperity of the nations lining its coasts
and even those inward and with no shared boundaries, due to the
access it grants to them,” he said.
He
disclosed that the region’s waterways were a key navigational route
for international commerce, connecting the Far East to countries in
the North and South of the Atlantic. “It is the hub of extensive
Trans-Atlantic trade linking Africa with Europe and the Americas,”
he said.
Dakuku
highlighted factors that made Nigeria strategic in the fight against
maritime crimes in the GoG region to include being the country with
the highest military contingent and might within the region, and a
huge deposit of oil and gas, which makes it a place of interest in
international energy dynamics. Others are the geo-strategic location
of Nigeria, and the country’s big deltas, which are the largest in
the world, with thousands of creeks.
The
NIMASA DG said being the biggest economy and most populous country
within the region, accounting for over 65 per cent of cargo generated
in the area, Nigeria occupied a vantage position to lead efforts to
solve the maritime security challenges in the region.
While
acknowledging that maritime insecurity had economic, social and
environmental implications for the region, Dakuku told the
international community that Nigeria was leaving no stone unturned in
the attempt to overcome the challenges.
He
said it was this determination that led to the decision to approach
the menace through a total spectrum maritime strategy. The strategy
involves law enforcement, regional cooperation, response capability
building, and enhanced maritime domain awareness for all organs of
government involved in maritime security.
The
DG declared that with the new initiatives, kidnapping and other
violent crimes in the GoG region could become history in a matter of
months.
Highlighting
the importance of regional and international cooperation in the fight
against maritime crime, Dakuku stated, “We have no option but to
work together, but we cannot have imposed solutions…
“NIMASA
will also be hosting a Global Maritime Security Conference in October
to seek tailored short and long term solutions to strengthen regional
and international collaborations in the Gulf of Guinea.”
He
noted that the implementation of an integrated national surveillance
and waterways protection solution with command and control
infrastructure in the Agency was part of the Nigerian government’s
deep blue contract to enhance security in the Gulf of Guinea.
Dakuku
said it was Nigeria’s interventions that led to the establishment
of the ECOWAS Integrated Maritime Security Strategy (EIMS) and
Inter-Regional Coordination Centre (ICC) in Yaoundé. He also
disclosed that Nigeria played a leading role in the establishment of
the African Integrated Maritime Security (AIMS).
At
the operational level, Dakuku stated that NIMASA, through
collaboration with the Nigerian Navy in 2012-2013, established
“Operation Prosperity”, a security taskforce, among others, which
had helped to reduce criminal activities in the region. Other
initiatives include the establishment of a legal framework to fight
maritime crimes through an anti-piracy bill. “The bill, when signed
into law, will bring to bear appropriate sanctions on offenders and
deter perpetrators of maritime crimes,” he assured.
Nigeria
will be hosting the global maritime security summit, themed “Maritime
Security and Global Trade Facilitation,” as part of its commitment,
along with its partners, to stamping out piracy in the region.
Thanking
the international bodies and other regional partners for their
efforts to tackle maritime insecurity, especially in the Gulf of
Guinea, Dakuku called for more support in the fight against piracy
and maritime crimes.
NIMASA
is the Nigerian Government Agency responsible for ensuring safety and
security on the country’s waterways, among other mandates as
enshrined in the NIMASA Act, 2007.
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