TESTIMONIALS

โ€œReceived the latest edition of Professional Security Magazine, once again a very enjoyable magazine to read, interesting content keeps me reading from front to back. Keep up the good work on such an informative magazine.โ€

Graham Penn
ALL TESTIMONIALS
FIND A BUSINESS

Would you like your business to be added to this list?

ADD LISTING
FEATURED COMPANY
News Archive

Seychelles Meet

by Msecadm4921

INTERPOL Secretary General Ronald K Noble said that the efforts of the Seychelles in fighting the global crime of maritime piracy were important to the security of all nations.

He was recently in the country, meeting the Seychelles Minister for Home Affairs, Environment and Transport, Joel Morgan, as well as with its Minister of Foreign Affairs, Jean-Paul Adam. โ€œThe Seychelles is fully committed to working with INTERPOL to help create a sustainable response to the transnational threat of piracy. As a small island nation which has found itself increasingly on the front line as the hub for international counter-piracy operations and prosecutions, the Seychelles welcomes the important support provided by INTERPOL and its global network in developing its critical law enforcement needs,โ€ said Minister Morgan.

With the visit by the Head of INTERPOL coming in the wake of a decision by the European Union in February 2011 to fund a EUR 1.6 million project that will see INTERPOL provide essential equipment and training to law enforcement across East African countries tackling maritime piracy, a significant part of the funding will be dedicated to developing forensic and investigative capacity in the Seychelles.

โ€œINTERPOL is committed to supporting police in its member countries tackle what is at its core, a transnational crime problem. Our focus is to ensure that police professionals in the Seychelles have the forensic tools, capacity and training, as well as international support they need in order to carry out investigations into maritime piracy and other crimes as effectively as possible,โ€ said Mr Noble.

In this respect, a joint INTERPOL-UNODC criminal intelligence analysis training course designed to build police capacity in East Africa to combat maritime piracy was held in January and February this year at the Seychelles Police Academy.

With talks between the ministers and the Head of INTERPOL therefore taking in the need to build capacity and train police in the Seychelles and across East Africa to effectively combat maritime piracy, Secretary General Noble commended what he called the โ€˜exemplary efforts by authorities in the Seychelles to work internationally with INTERPOL’s global network by sharing information and prosecution intelligence, which are vital in establishing links between maritime piracy cases’.

The Head of INTERPOLโ€™s Maritime Piracy Taskforce, Pierre St Hilaire, said: โ€œThe essential role to be played by law enforcement against maritime piracy has been recognized by the United Nations and the European Union. In this endeavour, the Seychelles is a vital frontline partner in international efforts to effectively address the transnational threat of maritime piracy."

In April, the United Nations Security Council passed a Resolution which aims to boost anti-piracy efforts off the coast of Somalia by urging all member countries to co-operate with INTERPOL to secure prosecutions. Previously, in November 2010, it unanimously endorsed a resolution which ‘urges states, in co-operation with INTERPOL and Europol, to further investigate international criminal networks involved in piracy off the coast of Somalia, including those responsible for illicit financing and facilitation’.

The European Union in December 2010 adopted a Decision which will see the EUโ€™s on-going military operation against maritime piracy off the coast of Somalia use INTERPOLโ€™s global network and tools to fight the criminal networks behind piracy in the Gulf of Aden.