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International Legal Regime Concerning Piracy in the Gulf of Guinea
International Legal Regime Concerning Piracy in the Gulf of Guinea

Author(s): Anyanova Yekaterina SERGEEVNA
Subject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, International Law, Law on Economics
Published by: ASERS Publishing
Keywords: piracy; armed robbery against ships; UN Law of the Sea Convention 1982; law of the sea; maritime security;

Summary/Abstract: Professor Anyanova Yekaterina Sergeevna express her thanks to International Chamber of Commerce International Maritime Bureau (ICC IMB) for kindly provided information on piracy after the request. Author would like to extend her gratitude to Prof. A.N. Vylegzhanin for his invaluable assistance and advice,which helped me in writing the paper. I would like to thank the management and personnel of JSC ‘Pribaltiysky Sudostroitelny Zavod 'Yantar'‘ for various kinds of aid, for their understanding and sympathy. My warmest thanks go to my dearest people – my family. Their support and understanding was what gave me strength and stamina to carry through with the work. To all these people I owe so much; without them I would not have been able to accomplish my goal.This paper focuses on the problem of piracy consideration in international law. The urgency of this problem can be attributed to the considerable damages it inflicts on the global economy. Despite the general decline in pirate attacks worldwide due to the effective curbing of the notorious Somalian piracy, the situation in the Gulf of Guinea remains critical. Irrespective of the fact that the successful solution of the long-standing Somali pirate crisis came from concerted efforts by various countries (in 2015 – 2016 no attacks in the region were reported), piracy situation in the Gulf of Guinea is not currently considered to be serious enough for international interference. Increased pirate activities in this area are allegedly associated with crude oil shipping through these waters, and also related to political and economic crises in coastal states. It has been repeatedly stressed that the Gulf of Guinea problem requires a comprehensive, all-inclusive approach to the issue of maritime security, and first and foremost this holds for the regional level where countries sharing the coastal line have to gear up their efforts to this effect.

  • Issue Year: VII/2016
  • Issue No: 22
  • Page Range: 2173-2179
  • Page Count: 7
  • Language: English