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Professional paper

https://doi.org/10.7225/toms.v09.n02.018

The Security Council and the Repression of Maritime Piracy: The Case of Somalia

Safwan Maqsood orcid id orcid.org/0000-0001-7938-7102 ; University of Sharjah


Full text: english PDF 953 Kb

page 358-364

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Abstract

Maritime piracy in the Somali territorial waters has been the focus of attention of international society for at least twelve years, and indeed the crime of piracy threatens international peace and security in a region through which half of the world’s crude oil passes. In the three-decade absence of a Somali State, intervention by the Security Council is required to suppress such crimes and ensure freedom of maritime navigation. The Council resolutions based on Chapter VII of the UN Charter call for the Member States of the United Nations to arrest and bring to trial those accused of piracy before national courts. It is necessary for the States that are involved in anti-Somali piracy efforts to incorporate the principle of universal jurisdiction into their national laws and adopt new laws criminalizing modern piracy, which is outside the traditional notion of piracy stipulated in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea 1982.

Keywords

Maritime piracy; Armed robbery; Ransom

Hrčak ID:

249528

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/249528

Publication date:

21.10.2020.

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