Darboe,
I was just curious because I shipped somethings to the Gambia through an agent in Miami and it has been months and my folks still did not get them. I am not being sarcastic and neither trying to be politically 'correct/incorrect" here.
Anyway, thank you.
Alieu
Haruna Darbo <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Never mind Alieu, You're not who I think you are. I'm still not pleased with
your behind but I'll let your questions be. They are valuable. The answers
are in the article. Sorry men. Try to talk more often so I'll not mistake you
for someone else. You know the Sanyangs are my cousins so I don't wanna be
displeased with you. Carry on. You know my name. Send me private mail so I can
share some ideas with you. Now go away.
In a message dated 10/21/2007 10:21:23 A.M. Mountain Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
Harouna,
When was this published? And when did this happen?
Alieu.
Haruna Darbo wrote:
Rogue ship breaks arrest London, 29 October 2003
The one that got away
Multi-million dollar cargoes are once again at risk of being stolen after a
ship operated by an organised group based in the Lebanon broke arrest from
Banjul, Gambia, in the early hours of 25th October 2003, warns ICC
International
Maritime Bureau (IMB).
CIUTA (IMO no.8030960) was one of at least two ships operating in the
Eastern
Mediterranean, North African and West African coasts, duping shippers out of
cargoes by offering bargain freight rates. Instead of discharging the
cargoes at their destinations, the ship s have been changing identity and
deviating
to other ports to illegally discharge the goods.
"It is all too easy at present for criminal vessels such as this to change
their identity, disappear and avoid the legal sanctions." said IMB's
director,
Captain Pottengal Mukundan. "Until the embossing of the IMO number on the
hull of the vessel becomes mandatory, it is extremely difficult to locate
and
seize the vessel in another port."
He added:"The marking of the IMO number visibly on the hull of the vessel is
part of the ISPS Code and will be phased in over the next few years, after
the Code comes into effect on 1st July 2004."
The first reported cargo theft by this group came to light in September 2002
when a 1969-built general cargo ship, LUCKY III loaded a steel cargo in
Istanbul and headed for Lagos, Nigeria. The ship subsequently deviated and
finished up illegally selling her cargo in Lattakia, Syria. In November
2002, the
same ship, having changed her name to STAR and flying the Tongan flag, was
chartered to take a consignment of polyethylene from Libya to Morocco. Once
again, she headed to Lattakia and discharged the cargo under false
documentation.
The IMB has learned that since leaving Lattakia, the ship has again changed
names.
In December 2002, PANCIU, a 1980-built general-cargo ship, flying the North
Korean flag, loaded a shipment of bagged cement in Alexandria, Egypt. The
shipment was intended for two consignees in Conakry, Guinea. Ship's identity
was
changed at sea to CIUTA and she deviated to Banjul, Gambia, where the cement
was sold to a local buyer. Fortunately, the ship was apprehended after an
alert local shipping agent in Banjul tipped off the IMB and the local
authorities. She was arrested under a court order of the Gambian Supreme
Court. Since
her arrest, two armed naval guards were stationed aboard 24-hours. The ship
however absconded in the early hours of 25 October 2003, with Mr Famara
Faye,
one of the guards, still onboard.
Given the previous history of the ship it is highly likely that CIUTA will
be
re-named, re-flagged and return to cargo theft operations.
International Maritime Bureau
ICC Commercial Crime Services
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