Security Council Calls for Strengthened International, Region

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Security Council Calls for Strengthened International, Region Security Council Calls for Strengthened International, Regional Coop... http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2010/sc9867.doc.htm 24 February 2010 Security Council SC/9867 Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York Security Council 6277th Meeting (AM) SECURITY COUNCIL CALLS FOR STRENGTHENED INTERNATIONAL, REGIONAL COOPERATION TO COUNTER TRANSNATIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME, IN PRESIDENTIAL STATEMENT Head of United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime Antonio Maria Costa Briefs; Secretary-General: States Must Mount Comprehensive Response to Criminal Scourge With the top United Nations anti-drug official urging concerted global action to “break the vicious circle between insecurity and underdevelopment” being increasingly fuelled by criminal networks, drug smugglers and human traffickers, the Security Council today called on the world body’s Member States to increase international and regional cooperation to tackle transnational organized crime. Following an in-depth briefing by Antonio Maria Costa, Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) on threats to global peace and security posed by drug trafficking and other organized criminal activity, the Security Council adopted a presidential statement (S/2009/PRST/4), noting that such transnational threats were a “growing concern” and might threaten the security of countries on its agenda, including nations trying to recover from conflict. In the statement, read by Gérard Araud of France, which holds the Council’s Presidency for February, the 15-nation body also noted with concern the increasing link, in some cases, between drug trafficking and the financing of terrorism, including through the use of proceeds derived from illicit cultivation, production of and trafficking in narcotic drugs and their precursors, as well as illegal arms trafficking. The Council said it would consider all such transnational threats, as appropriate. The Council noted that in a globalized society, organized crime groups and networks, now better armed with high tech communications equipment, were becoming more diversified and connected in their illicit operations, which might aggravate threats to international security. In such a context, the Council was particularly concerned by the emergence of cybercrime, as well as the “increase in kidnapping and hostage-taking, in some areas of the world with a specific political context, with the aim of raising funds or gaining political concessions”. Reaffirming and commending the work of UNODC in collaboration with other relevant United Nations entities, the Council encouraged Member States to broaden cooperation at all levels with that agency and the International Narcotic Control Board to counter the illicit production of, demand for and trafficking in drugs, and to identify emerging drug trafficking trends. The Council invited Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who opened today’s meeting, to consider transnational threats as a factor in conflict prevention strategies, conflict analysis, 1 of 17 25/02/2010 10:52 AM Security Council Calls for Strengthened International, Regional Coop... http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2010/sc9867.doc.htm integrated missions’ assessment and planning and to consider including in his reports, as appropriate, analysis on the role played by those threats in situations on the Council’s agenda. In his statement, Secretary-General Ban warned the Council that, so far, cooperation between Governments was lagging behind cooperation between organized crime networks. Member States must mount a comprehensive and coordinated response against that scourge, just as they had in they had united to fight pandemics, poverty, climate change and terrorism. He noted that, while Governments had worked together on a number of important initiatives, including the General Assembly's efforts against drugs, the Kimberley Process against blood diamonds, and the United Nations Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking: “[T]here is so much more to be done against emerging threats like cyber-crime, money-laundering, environmental crime, and the dumping of hazardous waste.” As a starting point, he recalled that the Crime Prevention Congress to be held in April in Salvador, Brazil, would offer an opportunity to explore how the international community could strengthen the legal and operational means to fight them. This year also marked the tenth anniversary of the adoption of the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, and he urged Governments to sharpen that “powerful instrument” at the Conference of Parties in October. One of the most important improvements would be the establishment of a monitoring mechanism, he added. “Transnational networks create vectors of violence that blaze trails of death and destruction through some of the world's most vulnerable regions. Crime prevention is conflict prevention: together they build safer and healthier societies,” he said, adding that criminal justice should figure more prominently in United Nations peacebuilding and peacekeeping. “Together, let us prevent drug trafficking and organized crime from threatening international peace and security and all our hard-won work, across our agenda,” he declared. For his part, Mr. Costa also urged the international community to shore up their legal defences against organized crime networks, warning that international mafias particularly exploited the instability caused by conflict. They thrived in areas lost to insurgency and took advantage of a Government’s inability to provide security. That created a vicious circle, he said, declaring that vulnerability attracted crime, crime in turn deepened vulnerability. In a chain reaction, humanitarian crises followed, development was stalled and peacekeepers were deployed. A bigger problem was that even though technology had practically abolished time and space, and stakeholders should know what was happening around the planet at any moment, they didn’t. “There are so many forgotten places, out of Government control, too scary for investors and tourists […] precisely the places where smugglers, insurgents and terrorists operate,” he said, adding that unperturbed and undetected, they ran fleets of ships and planes, trucks and containers that carried tons of drugs and weapons. With “so many blank spots on the radar screen, with deadly consequences”, he called for a change in attitude. Indeed, it was time to regard information sharing as a way of strengthening sovereignty, and not surrendering it. If police stopped at borders while criminals crossed them freely, sovereignty was already breached. A more cooperative attitude would help establish networks to monitor illicit flows, share intelligence and carry out joint operations. His Office supported that in Central and West Asia, the Gulf, West Africa, and along the main drug routes into Europe and across Mesoamerica. More was needed, for example, across the Sahara-Sahel region, as proposed to the Council in December. He said that, because of the cross-cutting nature of organized crime, a system-wide response was needed. He was pleased that the Council supported the growing cooperation of various relevant departments and the Peacebuilding Commission, as that would ensure that the 2 of 17 25/02/2010 10:52 AM Security Council Calls for Strengthened International, Regional Coop... http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2010/sc9867.doc.htm United Nations conflict prevention, crisis management and peacekeeping included a criminal justice component. The Council might also want to consider including a criminal justice component into relevant peacekeeping missions. “We need deeds more than words,” he said, noting that just last week, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) ministers had told him that cocaine trafficking in the region had declined in the past 18 months. However, there were warning signs that traffickers were returning to the scene, because tough words had not been matched by equally robust actions. “Let’s learn the lesson.” When Council members addressed the meeting, most agreed that, in the current era of globalization, organized criminal networks had become more diversified and connected. They also highlighted successful efforts underway to curb poppy cultivation in Afghanistan and to rout drug traffickers in West Africa. While they stressed the need for broad global cooperation to tackle the threats posed by such groups, including trafficking in drugs, weapons and people, as well as money laundering, terrorist financing and cybercrime, they expressed particular concern for the havoc organized criminal activity could wreak in countries with weak justice systems and haphazard law enforcement or border controls. Along those lines, the representative of the United Kingdom said the fact that countries and regions where the rule of law was weak were particularly vulnerable to such threats underlined the importance of coordinated international engagement, often with a strong peacebuilding focus, to help build capacity in places most at risk. Time and again, as the Council examined cases of recurring conflict, it saw that weak judicial systems and lack of effective policing capacity were a big part of the problem. He said that all those were sensitive issues that would not be easy for any Government. But, if transnational criminals were agile and inventive, so must be the response of the international community. Similarly, Nigeria’s representative said that tackling challenges posed by drug trafficking required
Recommended publications
  • Notes for Side Event on West Africa
    EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT Special Committee on Organized Crime, Corruption and Money-laundering (CRIM) Anti-money laundering A key element to fight narco-crime Antonio Maria Costa United Nations Under-Secretary General (2002-10) Editor, Journal of Policy Modelling (Elsevier) [email protected] www.AntonioMariaCosta.com Abstract: this statement examines the economic, financial and strategic dimensions of organized crime (especially drug trafficking) and shows that governments’ inability to deal with it is due to poor understanding of: (i.) the extent crime conditions society at large, (ii.) the way it has infiltrated legitimate business (especially banking), and (iii.) the power it has accumulated thanks to the behaviour of unscrupulous white-collar professionals (bankers, lawyers, notaries, realtors, accountants etc), all too willing to hide and recycle mafia resources. Current crime-control responses, based on police activity meant to identify, seize and punish suspects, are proving only partially effective: criminals locked up in prison or liquidated are rapidly replaced by new recruits, whose supply is infinitely elastic, especially in developing countries. The fight against transnational organized crime should rather focus on disrupting markets and illicit trade flows. Next the statement provides evidence that organized crime is an economic force motivated by economic stimuli, driven by mini(risk)/max(revenue) principles. Therefore crime must be fought on economic grounds, especially deleveraging its enormous assets (by means of much stronger anti-money laundering measures than presently in place). Above all governments should, individually and collectively, follow the money trail to identify and punish financial institutions responsible of blood-money laundering. The statement concludes with a pessimistic note.
    [Show full text]
  • GENERAL ASSEMBLY INFORMAL MEETING on PIRACY 14 May
    GENERAL ASSEMBLY INFORMAL MEETING ON PIRACY 14 May 2010, United Nations Headquarters The problem of international maritime piracy has in the last few years gained global attention, particularly with the increasing incidents of piracy in the Gulf of Aden and especially off the coast of Somalia. Recent statistics from the International Maritime Bureau indicate that in 2009 alone pirates attacked 217 ships with 47 successful hijackings. Pirates extorted more than US $60 million in ransom, the largest payment on record. In 2008, there were 242 attacks with 111 successful hijackings and about US $40 million in ransom. The adverse security, political, legal, economic and social implications of this scourge are of serious concern to the international community. With regard to Somalia, the United Nations has taken actions aimed at strengthening and assisting the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) to improve the security situation in Somalia, which is essential for an enabling environment to fight piracy off the coast of Somalia. The Security Council has authorized measures to counter piracy and armed robbery off the coast of Somalia. A Contact Group on Piracy off the coast of Somalia CGPCS) has also been established. These efforts notwithstanding, the sovereignty, economy and security of Somalia remain under serious threat as a result of piracy. Piracy has a destabilizing effect on regional and global trade and security. There is therefore the necessity for global strategies to address the factors that trigger and sustain piracy. Moreover, its rapid geographical spread and complexity necessitate a deeper and more comprehensive look at the various facets of the problem in order to devise a collective and more coordinated response.
    [Show full text]
  • The Vienna Spirit
    The Vienna Spirit Report on the 40th Meeting of the Chairmen and Coordinators of the Group of 77 and China The Vienna Spirit Report on the 40th Meeting of the Chairmen and Coordinators of the Group of 77 and China Vienna, 2007 The Vienna Chapter of the Group of 77 and China wishes to express its gratitude to the Director-General of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization, Mr. Kandeh Yumkella, and his staff, for co-hosting this important event, as well as for their invaluable support. We are also grateful to Mr. Mohamed ElBaradei, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency; Mr. Antonio Maria Costa, Director-General of the United Nations Office at Vienna and Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime; Mr. Mohammed Barkindo, Acting for the Secretary-General of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries; and Mr. Suleiman J. Al-Herbish, Director-General of the OPEC Fund for International Development, for their generous hospitality, and for their interest in and support to the ideals of the Group. This publication has been prepared under the overall direction of His Excellency Ambassador Horacio Bazoberry, Permanent Representative of Bolivia and Chairman of the G-77 Vienna Chapter during 2006 and Mr. Aegerico Lacanlale, Director, Strategic Planning and Coordination Group. Mr. Paul Hesp, UNIDO consultant has prepared this report and was assisted by Ms. Annemarie Heuls, Office of the Chairman of the G-77 Vienna Chapter. Foreword Ambassador Dumisani S. Kumalo, Chairman of the G-77 during 2006. The meetings of the Chapters of the Group of 77 and China represent a response to the need for coordination among the different United Nations locations where the Group is operating.
    [Show full text]
  • States Simply Do Not Care the Failure of International Securitisation Of
    International Journal of Drug Policy 68 (2019) 3–8 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect International Journal of Drug Policy journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/drugpo Policy analysis States simply do not care: The failure of international securitisation of drug control in Afghanistan T ⁎ Jorrit Kamminga Netherlands Institute of International Relations Clingendael, Clingendael 7, 2597 VH The Hague, the Netherlands ARTICLE INFO ABSTRACT Keywords: The link between the world drug problem and securitisation has been predominantly established to argue that an Illicit drugs existential threat discourse reinforces the international prohibitionist regime and makes it harder for alternative Afghanistan policy models to arise. This analysis is problematic for three main reasons. Firstly, it overestimates the current Securitisation strength of the international drug control regime as a normative and regulatory system that prescribes state Security behaviour. Secondly, the current international regime does not inhibit policy reforms. While the international Drug prohibition treaty system proves resistant to change, it is at the national and local levels where new drug policies arise. International regime ‘War on Drugs’ Moreover, these are generally not the draconian or emergency measures that successful securitisation would predict. Thirdly, the analysis so far misinterprets criminalisation or militarisation as evidence of securitisation. As the case of Afghanistan shows, securitisation attempts, such as those linking the Taliban and the illicit opium economy, may have reinforced the militarisation of drug control in Afghanistan, but did not elevate the illicit drug economy as an external threat or a top priority. While there have been short-lived spikes of attention and provincial level campaigns to eradicate poppy cultivation, these have never translated into a sustained structural effort to combat illicit drugs in Afghanistan.
    [Show full text]
  • The UN Drug Control Debate 2004
    WOLA Drug War Monitor JANUARY 2004 A WOLA BRIEFING SERIES A publication of WOLA’s Cracks in the Vienna Consensus: “Drugs, Democracy and Human Rights” project, The UN Drug Control Debate which examines the impact of drug by Martin Jelsma and Pien Metaal (Transnational Institute – TNI) trafficking and U.S. international drug control policies on “Laws – and even the international Conventions – are not written in stone; they can be human rights and changed when the democratic will of nations so wishes it.”1 democratization trends throughout Latin our decades have passed since the first United Nations drug control convention UNITED NATIONS America and the entered into force. Numerous UN conferences and summits have been devoted Caribbean F to negotiating a harmonized global approach to illicit drugs. Yet more and more cracks are now beginning to appear in the supposedly universal model which is, in reality, based on a highly fragile consensus. The failure to counter the ever-growing problems related to the abuse of illicit drugs has led countries to question the validity of current policies and to experiment with approaches less driven by the U.S.-inspired ideology of “zero tolerance” and more rooted in pragmatism. This has led to increasing acceptance of the concept of harm reduction for consumers, where drug use is treated as a public health rather than a law enforcement problem. On the production side, discussion centers on the need to secure alternative livelihoods for involved farmer communities and how to most effectively promote alternative development. The policy debates are heating up within the polarized environment of the UN drug control system, under the pressure of the looming 2008 deadline established in 1998 by the UN General Assembly Special Session on Drugs to achieve significant and measurable results in reducing world drug supply and demand.
    [Show full text]
  • United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
    UNITED NATIONS OFFICE ON DRUGS AND CRIME UNITED NATIONS OFFICE ON DRUGS AND CRIME TABLE OF CONTENTS WELCOME LETTER ........................................................................................................................................... 3 COMMITTEE HISTORY AND POWERS ....................................................................................................... 4 ADDRESSING THE MODERN WAR ON DRUGS THROUGH THE REHABILITATION OF DRUG SUPPLIERS .......................................................................................................................................................... 5 HISTORY AND BACKGROUND OF THE PROBLEM............................................................................................................ 5 Introduction ................................................................................................................................................................. 5 Conventions .................................................................................................................................................................. 6 CURRENT SITUATION ......................................................................................................................................................... 9 Extent of drug supply.............................................................................................................................................. 10 Case Study ..................................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • War on Drugs: Report of the Global Commission on Drug Policy
    WAR ON DRUGS REPORT OF THE GLOBAL COMMISSION ON DRUG POLICY JUNE 2011 REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONERS GLOBAL COMMISSION Asma Jahangir, human rights activist, former UN Special Rapporteur on Arbitrary, Extrajudicial and ON DRUG POLICY Summary Executions, Pakistan Carlos Fuentes, writer and public intellectual, Mexico César Gaviria, former President of Colombia Ernesto Zedillo, former President of Mexico Fernando Henrique Cardoso, former President of To learn more about the Commission, visit: Brazil (chair) www.globalcommissionondrugs.org George Papandreou, Prime Minister of Greece Or email: [email protected] George P. Shultz, former Secretary of State, United States (honorary chair) Javier Solana, former European Union High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, Spain John Whitehead, banker and civil servant, chair of the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation, United States Kofi Annan, former Secretary General of the United Nations, Ghana Louise Arbour, former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, President of the International Crisis Group, Canada Maria Cattaui, Petroplus Holdings Board member, former Secretary-General of the International Chamber of Commerce, Switzerland Mario Vargas Llosa, writer and public intellectual, Peru Marion Caspers-Merk, former State Secretary at the German Federal Ministry of Health Michel Kazatchkine, executive director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, France Paul Volcker, former Chairman of the United States Federal Reserve and of the Economic Recovery Board Richard Branson, entrepreneur, advocate for social causes, founder of the Virgin Group, co-founder of The Elders, United Kingdom Ruth Dreifuss, former President of Switzerland and Minister of Home Affairs Thorvald Stoltenberg, former Minister of Foreign Affairs and UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Norway EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The global war on drugs has failed, with Our principles and recommendations can devastating consequences for individuals be summarized as follows: and societies around the world.
    [Show full text]
  • An Open Letter to the Delegates of the Forty-Eighth Session of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND)
    March 1, 2005 An Open Letter to the delegates of the Forty-eighth session of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) In a year when the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) is chair of the governing body of the UN’s Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), we write to express concern about U.S. efforts to force a UNODC retreat from support of syringe exchange and other measures proven to contain the spread of HIV among drug users. Injection drug use accounts for the majority of HIV infections in dozens of countries in Asia and the former Soviet Union, including Russia, China, all of Central Asia, and much of Southeast Asia. In most countries outside Africa, the largest number of new infections now occurs among injection drug users. As UNODC director Antonio Maria Costa noted at the July 2004 International AIDS Conference, effective responses to injection driven AIDS epidemics require expanded HIV prevention, including syringe exchange, rather than policies that accelerate HIV infections through widespread and indiscriminate imprisonment. Unfortunately, recent events suggest that UNODC—under pressure from the United States—is being asked to withdraw support from proven HIV prevention strategies at precisely the moment when increased commitment to measures such as syringe exchange and opiate substitution treatment is needed. It is particularly alarming that the silencing of UNODC is occurring in a year when the agency is chair of UNAIDS’ Committee of Co-sponsoring Organizations and in a year when HIV prevention is a focus of thematic debate at the 48th meeting of the CND.
    [Show full text]
  • International Organizations
    INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY (E.S.A.) Headquarters: 8–10 Rue Mario Nikis, 75738 Paris Cedex 15, France phone 011–33–1–5369–7654, fax 011–33–1–5369–7560 Chairman of the Council.—Per Tegne´r. Director General.—Jean-Jacques Dordain. Member Countries: Austria Greece Portugal Belgium Ireland Spain Denmark Italy Sweden Finland Luxembourg Switzerland France Netherlands United Kingdom Germany Norway Czech Republic Cooperative Agreement.—Canada. European Space Operations Center (E.S.O.C.), Robert-Bosch-Str. 5, D–64293 Darmstadt, Germany, phone 011–49–6151–900, fax 011–49–6151–90495. European Space Research and Technology Center (E.S.T.E.C.), Keplerlaan 1, NL–2201, AZ Noordwijk, ZH, The Netherlands, phone 011–31–71–565–6565, Telex: 844–39098, fax 011–31–71–565–6040. European Space Research Institute (E.S.R.I.N.), Via Galileo Galilei, Casella Postale 64, 00044 Frascati, Italy, phone 011–39–6–94–18–01, fax 011–39–6–9418–0280. Washington Office (E.S.A.), 955 L’Enfant Plaza, SW., Suite 7800, 20024. Head of Office.—Dieckmann Andreas (202) 488–4158, fax 488–4930, [email protected]. INTER-AMERICAN DEFENSE BOARD 2600 16th Street, NW., 20441, phone (202) 939–6041, fax 387–2880 Chairman.—Lt. Gen. Jose´ Roberto Machado e Silva, Air Force, Brazil. Vice Chairman.—GB Mario Ferro Rendon, Army, Guatemala. Secretary.—CF Paulo Ce´sar Bittencourt Ferreira, Navy, Brazil. Director General.—GB Ancil W. Antoine, Army, Trinidad and Tobago. Deputy Secretary for— Administration.—COL Pedro Pimentel, Army, Chile. Conference.—Col. Luiz Cla´udio Moreira Novaes, Air Force, Brazil.
    [Show full text]
  • Antonio Maria Costa’S Visit to India
    Executive Director of The UNODC , Mr. Antonio Maria Costa’s visit to India Mr. Antonio Maria Costa, the Executive Director of The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime will be visiting India for three days beginning 23rd May 06. During his visit he will be meeting with Ministers and senior officials of different Ministries, to get a first hand impression of the drugs and crime situation in India. He will also explore the possibilities of strengthening and deepening the ongoing joint initiatives. Mr. Costa will have the opportunity of visiting a few of the project sites in Delhi and Kolkatta. Mr. Costa is also the Director General of UN Office at Vienna, He took up his duties with the UN Office at Vienna on 7 May 2002. Mr. Costa was previously serving as the Secretary-General of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) in London where he was responsible for political issues, institutional affairs, corporate governance and questions relating to shareholders. Between 1987 and 1992, he served in various capacities at the Commission of the European Union, rising to the post of Director-General for Economics and Finance. Earlier in his career, Mr. Costa served as an economist in the United Nations Department of International Economics and Social Affairs between 1969 and 1983, and eventually became Head of Unit. He was subsequently appointed Under-Secretary-General (Special Counsellor) at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in Paris where he served until 1987. He was a member of the OECD Working Group for the liberalization of capital flows and the control of financial transactions, as well as Alternate Member of the International Monetary Fund (IMF)/World Bank Interim Committee and of the G-10 Group for the coordination of economic policy, public governance and international monetary affairs.
    [Show full text]
  • Download the Briefing: Measuring Progress
    Transnational Institute Progress Report As a contribution to the Mid -term (2003) Review of UNGASS April 2003 Measuring Progress: Global Supply of Illicit Drugs At the 1998 United Nations General Assembly Special Session the year 2008 was set as a target date for “eliminating or reducing significantly the illicit cultivation of the coca bush, the cannabis plant and the opium poppy” as well as “eliminating or significantly reducing the illicit ma nufacture, marketing and trafficking of psychotropic substances, including syn thetic drugs, and the diversion of precursors .”1 In Vienna, on 16 and 17 April 2003, the UN Com- mission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) will devote a ministerial segment to “evaluate progress made and difficulties encountered” in drug control efforts over the past five years. What progress has been made over the last five years in reducing the supply of illicit drugs? In this context, the Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Mr. Antonio Maria Costa, in his report for the UNGASS Mid-term Review, states that there is “encouraging progress towards still distant goals”.2 This report provides an overview of cultivation/production/manufacturing trends of the main illicit drugs, using, comparing and contextualising data from official and other sources. The final conclusions cast doubt upon any claims of measurable and sustainable progress. The avail able evidence does not provide any ground for optimism and the “drugs-free world by 2008” p ledge made at the UNGASS appears as unlikely now as it did five years ago. Illicit Crop Monitoring The illicit cultivation of opium poppy and coca bush, the plants from which heroin and co- caine are produced, primarily takes place in Asia and Latin America, often in inaccessible areas.
    [Show full text]
  • Twenty Years of Collapse and Counting the Cost of Failure in Somalia
    W PHOTO/F AP A RS A MEH A R A H ABDI ABDI H Twenty Years of Collapse and Counting The Cost of Failure in Somalia John Norris and Bronwyn Bruton September 2011 A Joint Report from the Center for American Progress and One Earth Future Foundation WWW.AMERICANPROGRESS.ORG WWW.ONEEARTHFUTURE.ORG Twenty Years of Collapse and Counting The Cost of Failure in Somalia John Norris and Bronwyn Bruton September 2011 A Joint Report from the Center for American Progress and One Earth Future Foundation Contents 11 Introduction and summary 17 Background: A brief history of the Somalia conflict 20 The human toll of Somalia’s conflicts 25 Humanitarian and development spending on Somalia 29 Remittances from the Somali diaspora 31 Peacekeeping, military responses, military aid, antiterrorism, and diplomacy costs 42 Piracy 45 International crime and illicit financial flows 49 Conclusion 50 Endnotes 54 About the Authors Piracy Problems Average ransom paid to Somali pirates per released ship in 2010 $5.4 million1 an increase of 2 100%since 2009 vi Center for American Progress | Twenty Years of Collapse and Counting 3 Number of Somali Number of hostages pirates on or awaiting taken by Somali trial in 2010 4 pirates in 20101,181 750 5 Number of0 ships with armed guards hijacked (to date) Minimum number of companies providing maritime security in the region 246 PHOTO: JEHAD NGA/THE NEW YORK TIMES/REDUX | www.americanprogress.org vii Political Upheaval 8 Average term length of a Somali prime 11.9 minister since 2000 22 months Number of years Siad Barre was in Months
    [Show full text]