With focus on Houthi attacks in Red Sea, threat from Somali pirates re-emerges

Following first ship hijacking in six years, there have been three piracy attacks off the coast of Somalia so far this year

Police in a patrol boat from the northeastern Somali state of Puntland protect a ship last week following an increase in piracy attacks in the area. Photograph: Abuukar Mohamed Muhidin/Anadolu via Getty Images
Police in a patrol boat from the northeastern Somali state of Puntland protect a ship last week following an increase in piracy attacks in the area. Photograph: Abuukar Mohamed Muhidin/Anadolu via Getty Images

With western navies focused on trying to quell Houthi militants’ attacks on merchant shipping in the Red Sea, Somali pirates are quietly showing signs of making a comeback.

In December, they hijacked their first ship in six years when the commodity carrier Ruen was boarded and taken to a port in the east African country, according to the International Maritime Bureau, a piracy watchdog. Figures from the European Union Naval Force show there have been further attempts since then, and this week the UK Naval Service issued an advisory to shipping cautioning that pirates are operating in the Indian Ocean.

For the maritime industry, the incidents are a chilling reminder of a period – a little over a decade ago – when Somali pirates menaced ships across swathes of the Indian Ocean. Back then, incidents included seizing the giant oil supertanker Sirius Star and the US-flagged container ship Maersk Alabama. They led to what was viewed at the time as a controversial deployment of armed guards on board commercial ships.

Analysts say that the latest recent resurgence is unlikely to mark a full-scale repeat of that era, in part due to more advanced technology and the fact that the use of armed guards is now much more common. But the extent of any resurgence would depend on how successfully the pirates can revive their old ways: hijack ships, take them back to Somalia, and wait for ransoms, sometimes stretching to multimillion dollars, to be paid.

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“If you feed the beast with cash, then it will keep coming,” John Thompson, a founder of intelligence firm Ambrey, said in a podcast for insurance company NorthStandard.

This week, the UK Maritime Trade Operations, a liaison between the British navy and merchant ships, warned that two so-called pirate-action groups are operating in Indian Ocean. That came after guards on a commodity carrier exchanged fire with a small boat about 1,100km southeast of Oman over the weekend – far from where the Houthi attacks have been happening.

The director of Somalia’s maritime agency said last month that he believes more naval assets are being focused on waters being attacked by the Houthis, mostly hundreds of miles away. Stopping those incidents is vital if billions of dollars of trade is to continue being able to use Egypt’s Suez Canal.

In the past, the pirates’ would seize one relatively large vessel, known as a mother ship, from which to co-ordinate attacks.

“The hijacking of the Ruen, boarding of the vessel in January, and the reported hijacking of fishing vessels which have traditionally been used as mother vessels is a concern,” said Cyrus Modi, a director at the International Maritime Bureau, adding that ships in the region should adhere to industry advice to stop such attacks.

The EU’s Naval Force’s counter-piracy mission in the area is called Operation Atalanta. EUNavfor, as it is known, acknowledged a spike in incidents since November.

It said that “no assets from Atalanta have been redirected to areas outside the area of operations”.

However, out of three vessels that it said provide support to Operation Atalanta, one of them – the Alsace – went to the aid of a tanker that was attacked by Houthis while another, the Languedoc, shot down a Houthi drone in the Red Sea, according to postings on X from the French military and US Central Command.

EUNavfor said it was very common for such vessels to support other operations.

Despite the re-emergent threat, improvements in technology also make it easier to avoid such incidents, according to Thompson.

He said Ambrey has advised about 20 vessels to change their courses so that they avoid ships that were purported to be have pirates on board. In the previous wave, there wasn’t the technology to do that, he said.

Piracy attacks off the coast of Somalia peaked at about 200 incidents a year from 2009 through 2011, according to EUNavfor. With just over a month of 2024 gone, there have already been three, its data show.

Many of the piracy groups were involved in smuggling, with routes that include Yemen, he said in a webinar with trade group BIMCO.

“They can conduct piracy operations if they need to or if they are paid to do so, or if they see the risk rewards becoming favourable to their other activities,” he said. “I don’t think it will play a very big role in this conflict, actually a very small one, but it could be that some are hired to do something.” – Bloomberg