EU to expand Operation Atalanta and will begin training Somalia's security forces
The ministers of Defence of the European Union agreed on Wednesday to expand the objectives of Operation Atalanta to include control of Somali ports where pirate ships are based, as well as the possibility of "neutralising" the mother ships that allow the pirates to operate more than 1,000 km from the coast.
Since the end of March, when the winter monsoon draws to an end, Somali ports and mother ships that allow pirates to aperate far from the coast will be controlled by Operation Atalanta against piracy in the Indian Ocean. These two new functions will be launched at the end of March when the winter monsoon draws to an end, and could involve an increase in the number of personnel and resources assigned to the Operation.
The ministers also agreed to increase the level of cooperation and collaboration with NATO and other countries that are carrying out surveillance operations in this part of the Indian Ocean.
At the end of the first day of the Informal Meeting of Ministers that is taking place in Mallorca, Spain's Minister of Defence, Carme Chacón, said that several countries had already said that they are prepared to contribute sea and air resources to reinforce Operation Atalanta beyond 2010.
The commanding officer of the Operation, the British rear admiral Peter Hudson, said it was ready to assume these new tasks to improve the control and surveillance of the ports and to exercise the right to search at sea.
The ministers also agreed to improve the application of the agreements that exist with Kenya and the Seychelles for taking legal action against pirates that are detained and to increase efforts to achieve similar agreements with other countries in the region, such as Tanzania, Mauritius and South Africa.
The meeting also discussed the approval and the launch of an operation to train Somalian security forces that would take place in Uganda and could be started in May. This mission, which would be led by Spain, also won support from the ministers of defence, many of whom offered their governments' willingness to contribute resources and materials.
The working session in the afternoon was joined by representatives from the five states of the Maghreb with which the European Union hopes to strengthen ties: Algeria, Libya, Morocco, Mauritania and Tunisia.
According to the Minister, it is a question of involving the countries of the Mediterranean in the tasks of controlling and combating organised crime, drug trafficking and the trafficking of people whose access to Europe involves crossing this shared sea.