01/18/2011 01:37 PM

A Precedent or a Farce?


Court Faces Daunting Hurdles in Hamburg Pirate Trial


By Michael Scott Moore <http://www.radiofreemike.com/blog/>  in Hamburg

A Hamburg court is trying to make sense of a pirate attack off the coast of
Somalia last April. But even as many hope the trial will produce a precedent
for Europe's approach to high seas crime, the court can't even figure out
how old the suspects are. The challenges to justice are immense.

Youssef M.'s daily routine has remained largely unchanged of late. Every
day, the young Somali sits in a Hamburg courtroom, headphones firmly clamped
to his ears, and listens attentively to a running translation of the
proceedings against him.

Whether he is indeed guilty of the crimes he has been charged with seems
beyond question. He belongs to a group of 10 Somalis caught by Dutch marines
last April 5. The group tried to hijack a German cargo ship, the MV Taipan,
but couldn't find the crew and were caught red-handed.

Nevertheless, the ongoing trial, which began last November, could have
far-reaching implications for the future of ongoing efforts to stem rampant
piracy off the coast of Somalia. With Kenya last year refusing to try any
more Somali pirates on Europe's behalf, Hamburg jumped into the void -- and
the ongoing proceedings may set a precedent for Western justice when it
comes to robbery on the high seas. 

But the trial has been full of absurdities. Not only has it been difficult
to ascertain the defendants' ages, but the court is faced with thorny
questions about how exactly German law should approach outlaws from a failed
state.

'A New Social and Legal Order' 

And it has been the defendants' lawyers' job to make those questions even
more difficult to answer. "Youssef M. finds himself in a completely new
social and legal order," his lawyer, Rainer Pohlen, said during proceedings
on Monday. He argued that his client was 16 years old -- young enough to be
considered for Hamburg's youth-welfare system. Pohlen then asked the
prosecution to drop charges against Youssef and place him under state
protection. 

There, Pohlen argued, he might be able to learn German and vital job skills
on the way to building a new life as a law-abiding immigrant. "He won't have
to fight for his daily bread here," Pohlen argued. "He would have a
completely different set of opportunities."

Hamburg state prosecutors, perhaps not surprisingly, refused to drop charges
on Monday, arguing that court medical experts have put his age somewhat
higher than 16. They also noted that some of the pirates -- no one is sure
yet who -- opened fire on the Taipan's bridge as they chased the ship. "The
captain had to fear for his life," state prosecutors said.

The 10 pirates attacked the Taipan last April about 580 nautical miles from
the eastern coast of Somalia. By the time they boarded, Captain Dierk Eggers
and his crew had disappeared into a hidden safe room. In the absence of a
hostage situation, an elite squad of Dutch marines decided to storm the
ship. No one died in the resulting gunfire, and the Dutch arrested the
Somalis and freed the Taipan crew. It's considered one of the most
successful counter-piracy operations since international navies started
patrolling off the coast of Somalia in 2008.

No Birth Certificates 

Since then, though, the case has become decidedly less clear-cut. The Dutch
insisted on extraditing the Somali prisoners to Germany, because the ship
belonged to the Hamburg-based firm Komrowski. And in Hamburg, the pirates
are being tried in a juvenile court, even though they're clearly not all
juveniles. Just how old they really are, however, is impossible to ascertain
with certainty. The Somali government collapsed 20 years ago and none of the
pirates have birth certificates.

Youssef M. claims to be 16. Court-appointed medical experts, however, argue
that he's closer to 18 or 19, based on dental examinations and skeletal
X-rays. How the question is resolved will play a significant role when it
comes to sentencing. 

His personal circumstances might matter, too. Last week Youssef M. told the
court that he was tricked into joining the pirate gang. 

"I was born the youngest of eight children," in northeastern Somalia, he
said, and lost his parents and half his family in accidents or acts of war
-- two sisters killed by a grenade, a brother run over by a bus. "When I was
nine or 10 years old, my brother brought me to the harbor, where I started
to work odd jobs. Most of the work was loading or unloading ships."

'Have to Be Watched' 

At 13, Youssef M. said, he worked as a night watchman for a fishing boat. "I
received a wage of less than one US dollar per night," he said through his
lawyer. "The situation in Somalia is such that almost anything that can be
stolen, will be stolen. People live in great need, so fishing boats have to
be watched."

A year later, in 2007, he became a fisherman. The work was hard and the pay
was scarce, he said. "Many times I found work for days or even weeks, but
sometimes there was no work for days, and I went hungry. When I had work, I
could sleep on the boat. Otherwise I slept on the street," he said. "Overall
the situation was very difficult."

In March 2010 a strange man came to him in the harbor where he worked and
asked if Youssef wanted to pilot a boat. The work involved running a wooden
motorboat as a shuttle for people and goods along the shore. "I worked
several days as a sort of taxi driver on the sea," said Youssef, for the
equivalent of two or three US dollars per day, which he considered good pay.
By then he was already working in one of the skiffs that would attack the
Taipan, he said. "Then the man asked if I was ready for a bigger job. It
would pay a flat $500." 

The Search for a Permanent Solution

He said no one went into detail about exactly what the job would entail.
Strange men brought him out to a hijacked fishing dhow, where Youssef M.
claims to have met the other alleged pirates in the courtroom for the first
time. "It was only on board the dhow that I realized we were supposed to
hijack a cargo ship," he said. "No one mentioned in my presence that there
was a possibility of getting arrested by an international naval coalition." 

"I did not think very hard about whether I should participate," he went on.
"Nevertheless it seemed as if everything had been planned ahead of time and
I had no choice. However, I was never threatened by anyone."

The statement read by his lawyer portrayed Youssef M. as a naïve follower
who neither planned the attack nor fired a weapon. According to his
statement -- which is impossible to confirm -- all he did was pilot the
skiff. 

"I want to say I'm very sorry for participating in this attack," he told the
court last Wednesday. "I could only see the dimensions of the crime in
retrospect.... The testimony by Captain Eggers impressed me deeply. That is
why I apologized to him in court."

In December and January, the 69-year-old Taipan captain, Dierk Eggers, gave
three days of testimony and described the hail of Kalashnikov fire that
pierced the steel of the bridge "like butter" before he and two other crew
members retreated to the safe room. The gunfire included one presumed round
from a grenade launcher, he said, which didn't explode but flew in through
one window and out another.

A Point of Apologizing 

Eggers came across as a kind and experienced seaman, and at the end of his
testimony Youssef M. made a point of apologizing. 

So far two other pirates have told their stories in court. The plea for
dismissal into the youth-welfare system by Youssef M.'s lawyer is an
indication of how the various defense teams intend to proceed. Even if some
defendants are found guilty, it's unclear whether Germany would ship them
back to Somalia after a jail sentence. Somalia has lacked a formal
government since 1991 and it is racked with civil war. Extreme poverty has
motivated many on the Somali coast to turn to piracy.

A recent trial in the US of five Somalis who attacked a guided-missile
frigate by mistake one night last April led to swift guilty verdicts last
November. They face life sentences in jail. But they were tried in a
military court, according to laws written over 200 years ago.

Western civilian courts are still trying to adjust to Somali piracy. In
Germany the defendants face a maximum of 15 years in jail. But if the court
points instead to expensive rehabilitation and, ultimately, to asylum, there
will be little appetite here to try pirates at all. Indeed, Germany would
prefer seeing the creation of a new international court designed
specifically to prosecute pirates. Berlin has been advocating such a court
ever since it launched a naval group to aid the European Union's
counter-piracy mission, called Atalanta, in 2008.

Guardian Angels 

"It needs to be an international authority," Germany's then-Defense Minister
Franz Josef Jung said in November 2008. "No one wants a Guantanamo on the
sea." 

The provisional solution at the time was to fund special piracy courts in
neighboring African countries like Kenya, since Somalia lacks a functioning
judiciary. At first the plan seemed to work -- a Kenyan court funded by the
United Nations and the EU has jailed dozens of Somali pirates. But rights
groups have raised questions about prison conditions in Kenya, and one
justice threw the whole project into question at the end of last year by
ruling that Kenyan law cannot extend to international waters. 

Meanwhile, high-seas crime continues. When Youssef M. apologized in court to
Dierk Eggers, the captain said, "I accept the apology. In fact I've been
ready to accept an apology for some time."

Eggers -- who says he bears no hate toward the pirates -- added later that
the formal nature of Youssef's apology disappointed him. "Because he might
have been killed too!" he told SPIEGEL ONLINE. "He was protected by the same
guardian angel that seems to have watched over me.... I think he also could
have apologized off the coast of Somalia."





URL:


*       http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,740122,00.html

 



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