ID | 129230 |
Title Proper | Puntland is for pirates |
Other Title Information | why are convicted high-seas bandits being sent to the Somali region that profits from their crimes? |
Language | ENG |
Author | Keenan, Jillian |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | H ARGEISA, Somalia - Mowlid Ahmed Abidoon stands quietly in the small prison cell where he has lived for nearly two years. Slot windows on one wall let in only a little sunlight, leaving his face almost entirely obscured in darkness. Yet there are splashes of color all around: The room's bunk beds are covered in sheets with bright floral and geometric patterns, over which hang canopies of blue mosquito nets -- cells within the cell. Clad in a striped polo shirt and prison-uniform pants, Mowlid estimates that he is about 20 years old; the last traces of baby fat still cling to his cheeks. He insists that he shouldn't be behind bars. "I'm a fisherman, not a pirate," he says flatly, as though he has delivered this speech a hundred times before. Court documents from Seychelles say otherwise. On Dec. 6, 2009, Mowlid and a band of fellow Somali pirates used firearms and explosives to attack the Topaz, a Seychelles Coast Guard patrol vessel. (Seychelles, an island nation, is about 825 miles southeast of Mogadishu, Somalia's coastal capital.) They were arrested, convicted, and sentenced to 24 years in prison. |
`In' analytical Note | Foreign Policy Vol. , No.205; March-April 2014: p.34-37 |
Journal Source | Foreign Policy Vol. , No.205; March-April 2014: p.34-37 |
Key Words | Somalia ; Ethnic Groups ; Conflict ; Social Crime ; Floral Patterns ; Geometric Patterns ; Patterns ; Somali Pirates ; Seychelles Coast Guard - SCG ; Patrol Vessel ; Seychelles ; Maritime Conflicts ; Ses Border |