GCaptain is a top-visited maritime and offshore industry
news site and this post attracted me –
first because of the name and then because of the news…….. before you read the
post, some prelude.
Liberia
is in West Africa bordered by Sierra Leone,
Guinea and Ivory Coast to
its east. It covers an area of 111,369 square kilometres (43,000 sq mi) and is
home to about 4 million people. English is the official language and over
thirty indigenous languages are also spoken within the country. Liberia is the only country in Africa founded by
United States
colonization while occupied by native Africans.
For those interested in Marine and ships, the Liberian
Registry, established in 1948 by former U.S. Secretary of State Edward
Stettinius, is recognized as one of the foremost open ship and corporate
registries.
The Liberian Registry is a sovereign maritime jurisdiction
responsible for the registration, regulatory enforcement, and safety of
ocean-going ships. The Registry establishes identification details for ships
and records legally enforceable documents, such as mortgages and bills of sale.
The Liberian Registry – the second largest in the world – includes over 3900
ships of more than 131 million gross tons, which represents 11 percent of the
world’s ocean going fleet. The Liberian
Registry is recognized at the top of every industry “white-list” including the
International Maritime Organization and the major Port State Control
authorities. According to the U.S. Maritime Administration,
Liberian flagged vessels carry more than one-third of the oil imported into the
United States.
The Registry is open to any ship owner in the world. In
order to enter the Liberian registry a vessel must be less than 20 years of age
and must meet high safety standards; Liberian flagged ships are able to trade
anywhere in the world. There are no crew nationality restrictions and taxes on
Liberian vessels are at rates based on the net tonnage.
Now the news from Gcaptain……… the Liberian Registry
has concluded its investigation into the pirate-hijacking of the product tanker
off Luanda, Angola, on 18 January 2014. The
Liberian investigation is based on evidence gathered by an INTERPOL-led
multinational Incident Response Team as well as findings of its own
investigative efforts. It states that the Liberian Administration is currently
in the process of publishing its report into the hijacking of the
Liberian-flagged vessel. Liberia
requested the attendance of the INTERPOL Incident Response Team in Tema, Ghana,
the port of refuge to which the vessel was directed following the disembarkation
of the pirates. The team, supported and helped by the Ghanaian authorities,
undertook a crime scene investigation on board the vessel. A representative of
the Liberian Flag Administration also attended on board in Tema to observe the
collection of forensic evidence by the authorities, and interviewed some crew
members. All parties were given full access to the vessel’s documents, officers
and crew. Upon arrival at Tema,
Ghana, all crew
members received immediate medical treatment and have since been repatriated.
Following the hijacking off Angola, the vessel proceeded to Nigeria and the
cargo was offloaded off the coast of that country by the pirates, believed to
be Nigerian nationals. During the hijacking, the fourth engineer was stabbed by
the pirates, and other crew members were beaten. The investigation report
described the ordeal of the fourth engineer based on his account of the
circumstances of the hijacking incident. It also revealed that, during the
hijacking, the pirates disabled the vessel’s AIS and other communication
equipment so that the vessel could not be tracked from shore or satellite. During
this period, the pirates painted over the identifying features of the vessel,
including funnel, name (and IMO number. The pirates also undertook three
separate ship-to-ship transfers of cargo amounting to the theft of
approximately 12,271 mt of cargo.
Before you read further, if you are wondering what was so
interesting in this hijack – the vessel’s name is ‘MT Kerala’ but not an Indian
vessel. Here are the details of the vessel as collated
from vesselfinder.com:
Ship type: Crude Oil Tanker
Flag: Liberia
IMO number: 9390927
MMSI: 636013350
Callsign A8MJ3
Now continuing Gcaptain report - according to the
findings, the owners/operators of the Kerala re-established contact with the
vessel on 26 January 2014, shortly after the pirates had disembarked. The
vessel immediately set a course for Tema, where a team of Angolan Navy
personnel subsequently boarded the Kerala and ultimately directed it back to Angola. The
vessel was cleared for discharge at Port Luanda on 19 February, 2014. Since
then, a team of Angolan policemen have prevented embarkation or disembarkation
of any person without permission from their superiors. The Kerala has not been
allowed to depart Angola,
even though it has completed cargo discharge operations. Liberia actively participated at the Joint
Co-ordination Meeting of interested parties of the Kerala hijacking incident at
INTERPOL Headquarters in Lyon in April 2014.
With regards – S. Sampathkumar
30th May 2014.
Article credit ~ courtesy : gcaptain.com