By: Keith Campbell
11th April 2012
South African Defence Minister Lindiwe Sisulu has confirmed that the
country will increase its naval budget.
Answering
a question from Engineering
News Online at a press conference at the 2012 Indian Ocean Naval
Symposium (IONS) in Cape Town
on Wednesday, Sisulu stated that the amount would be announced in her
department’s budget.
“When
we adopted the [Southern African Development Community (SADC)] Maritime
Security Strategy, we committed ourselves to giving more money to the navy.
This is a top priority for us.”
SADC
heads of State adopted the SADC Maritime Security Strategy in Angola on August 9, 2011.
This comes against the backdrop of growing SADC concern about
piracy and other forms of maritime crime and insecurity.
In
her keynote address opening the conference, Sisulu pointed out that African
countries were "particularly reliant on the sea and thereby vulnerable".
She
highlighted that, in 2006, the global total of people taken hostage at sea was
186, but that in 2010 the figure for the Indian Ocean alone was 1 016.
She
affirmed that the SADC was expecting increased pirate operations off its east
coast.
During the 12 months from March 2011 to the end of February 2012,
there were 57 pirate attacks in Tanzanian territorial waters, reported Sisulu,
citing her Tanzanian counterpart. This was "an unprecedented number, but
one that is indicative of the relocation of piracy to the SADC ocean".
She
further reported that foreign, particularly European, States were asking South Africa to
allow merchant ships with armed guards to enter this country's ports. "The
world is taking to the option of onboard [armed] security," she said.
"We are grappling with this development."
Sisulu
appealed to the IONS delegates, who come from 86 countries (both Indian Ocean rim States and observer nations) to advise
the South African government on the issue.
South Africa now has a trilateral agreement with Mozambique and
Tanzania, which allows the South African Navy (SAN) to undertake operations in
their waters. "This agreement allows us to conduct all activities aimed at
strengthening SADC on the east coast," explained SAN Chief Vice-Admiral Johannes Mudimu to the
press conference.
He
gave the assurance that the anti-piracy operation, codenamed Copper, (and which
involves the South African Air Force, Special Forces and South African Military
Health Services as well as the SAN) is continuing uninterruptedly.
"Currently,
in the Mozambique Channel , the SAS Drakensberg is taking over
from the SAS Isandlwana,"
he revealed.
"The
navy is tasked to patrol the northern Mozambique Channel ....[but] we can go
all the way to Tanzania ."
Although
the SAS Drakensberg
is primarily a tanker – it is officially designated a combat support ship by
the SAN – Mudimu gave the assurance it would be effective in fulfilling the
mission.
"The
Drakensberg has been the workhorse of the navy," he highlighted. "Drakensberg will give us
equal [anti-piracy] capability as the frigates."
All four of the SAN's frigates have now done anti-piracy patrols in the northernMozambique Channel . "We're
trying to involve as many assets as possible," said Mudimu.
All four of the SAN's frigates have now done anti-piracy patrols in the northern
*
Keith Campbell is attending IONS 2012 as a guest of the SAN.
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