Marine Security Firms Set Ethics Code in Battle against Piracy

By Jonathan Saul | May 9, 2011 
Reuters

Maritime security firms have come together to create a code of conduct and 
ethics, prompted by alarm over the rising number of companies without 
seaborne experience aiming to cash in on the surge in Somali piracy.

Increasingly violent attacks on merchant ships and crews by Somali gangs 
have led more ship owners to consider deploying private security teams on 
board vessels, attracting companies previously operating in Iraq and 
Afghanistan.

“There are literally hundreds of Iraq and Afghanistan ‘expatriates’ 
setting up shop, never having been aboard a ship before, much less knowing how 
to defend it,” said John Dalby of security company Marine Risk Management.

“We have fears that a glut of inexperienced and unqualified so-called 
maritime security operators are bringing the legit guys into disrepute.”

Dalby is one of the founders of the International Association of Maritime 
Security Professionals (IAMSP), a self-regulated, voluntary body seeking 
more transparency in the sector. Its code of conduct includes ensuring 
members are properly trained, abide by laws and regulations where they operate, 
act ethically and do not accept bribes.

“Private security in the marine sector is currently not regulated in the 
way that it is on land. There is a big worry this could be opening the doors 
to a lot of cowboys,” said Andrew Linington with seafarers’ union 
Nautilus International.

PRICES UNDERCUT

Officials say it costs around $55,000 to deploy an experienced four-man 
security team on a 10-12 day transit between Suez and Galle in Sri Lanka. 
Firms touting for business without experience have offered teams at $15,000 to 
$20,000.

“Security companies and individual professionals who are trying to operate 
to high standards get undercut by the competition, which is clearly less 
than satisfactory and provides a less than satisfactory service,” said David 
Buston, managing director of security firm Red Cell and an IAMSP founder.

Dalby said the IAMSP had over 400 members, including former marines and 
special forces from Britain’s Special Boat Service and the United States’ 
Navy Seals, comprising “half of the reputable industry”.

Overstretched international navies have proved unable to contain piracy in 
the Indian Ocean due to the vast distances involved. The crisis is costing 
world trade billions of dollars a year.

“The need to employ armed guards is an indication of the lack of political 
resolve to control the spread of Somali-based piracy across the northern 
Indian Ocean,” said Peter Hinchliffe, secretary general of the International 
Chamber of Shipping.

“The lack of regulation in the private security sector in the maritime 
domain is a problem and this is leading to growth in the sector which suggests 
that standards may be very variable.”

ARMS TRADE

David Stone, a licensed and registered arms dealer, director of maritime 
security company APPDS Ltd and an IAMSP member, said “fly-by-night” 
security companies had to buy their weapons on the black market in places such 
as 
Djibouti.

When approaching a 12-mile territorial zone close to a port, operators 
dumped their illicit weapons over board, he said, in order to avoid getting 
caught breaking the law.

“It means when they do another transit they will have to buy more arms. So 
it’s a vicious circle of the proliferation of illegal arms,” Stone said. “
This is something that the IMASP is trying to stop because it is illegal 
and gives a bad name to everyone in the business.”

The safety committee of the International Maritime Organization, a United 
Nations agency, will this week discuss the development of guidance on 
employing maritime security companies.

Many in the security industry have called for an amendment related to the 
position of private armed teams, which is not addressed under international 
maritime conventions.

Maritime lawyers say armed private security guards involved in a killing 
on board a ship may run the risk of criminal prosecution in some countries.

“Whereas in the past it could be argued that non-lethal countermeasures 
would be enough to deter pirates, as the threat escalates, not being armed is 
now becoming more of a challenge to justify,” said Red Cell’s Buston, 
whose firm provides training and advice to maritime security professionals.

“Those that are in control of potential lethal force … must have clear 
and agreed procedures to work under. Without this, the already grey area of 
armed guards at sea could turn into a real mess.”






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