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Somaliland releases 19 convicted pirates

Sunday, August 4th, 2019 09:30 | By
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Somaliland has invited condemnation by releasing 19 convicted pirates prematurely.

Somaliland handed the prisoners to Somalia to end of their term.

Seychelles led the condemnation saying the action was taken by Somaliland authorities without consulting the island Nation.

Somaliland authorities on Thursday released the convicts, who  had been sentenced in Seychelles to serve 30, 36 and 42 years in prison for piracy.

In 2011, the two countries signed a Memorandum of Understanding on the transfer of sentenced pirates between the government Somaliland and Seychelles.

In 2012, 19 convicts were transferred into the custody of the Somaliland authorities where the pirates were to complete their sentences.

The government of Seychelles, an archipelago in the western Indian Ocean, formally wrote to the Somaliland authorities, expressing its strong disapproval of the early release.

"The announcement came as a surprise for us because it is an action that has been taken without consultation with the government of Seychelles. It is against the MoU that we signed with the Somaliland authorities,” said Ian Madeleine, the director of Maritime Affairs at Seychelles’ Department of Foreign Affairs.

The unilateral decision by the Somaliland authorities to modify the sentences of the convicted pirates is in breach of the provisions of the agreement which states that the power to review the judgment or sentences remains with Seychelles, Madeleine said.

But authorities in Somaliland have hit back saying the international community failed to take over the prisoners expenses.

"They threw to us the prisoners and deserted, it was huge load for us to feed them and provide their health bills," a source from Somaliland government stated.

Seychelles with the special jurisdiction to handle piracy and maritime crime cases started hearing cases in Just 2015.

In May this year, the Seychelles Supreme Court formally charged five suspected Somali pirates who were transferred to Seychelles by EU NAVFOR. One of the pirates had been arrested and transferred to the Seychelles’ authorities in November 2017 and was repatriated in December 2018.

The Department said, “Seychelles has also written to Mauritius and the Indian Ocean Commission as the Chair of the Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia to call on the support of the international community to condemn the early release of the 19 Somali pirates by the Somaliland authorities and to bring the matter to the attention to the Secretary-General of the United Nations and the United Nations Security Council.”

Madeleine explained that such a decision endangers the efforts done to fight against piracy and puts at risk the security of the Indian Ocean.

The decision also compromises the extensive collective efforts of the international community to combat and suppress piracy off the coast of Somalia in order to guarantee the safety and security of the Western Indian Ocean.

It equally stands to erode the mechanisms, including arrest, prosecution and imprisonment that has been put in place to combat the scourge of piracy and other forms of illicit crimes, the department said.

The situation consequently stands to annul the cooperation that exists between the parties in relation to the repatriation of sentenced pirates on humanitarian grounds, the department said.

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