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In
a bid to foil any attempt by Al-Qaeda fighters to escape by sea
in the wake of the latest offensive launched against them in Afghanistan
and the Pakistani tribal areas, Pakistani authorities have allowed
coalition ships to patrol and monitor its coastal areas in the Arabian
sea within the 12-nautical mile limit.
The
Pakistan government's decision to allow the international coalition
task force, led by Britain, to monitor its coastal limits has made
it the eighth member of the task force conducting Operation Enduring
Freedom. According to reports, this decision followed talks held
in Islamabad two weeks ago, between General Musharraf and Admiral
Sir Alan West, the First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff for the
British Navy.
Pakistan's
coastal limits stretch up to 200 nautical miles in the open sea
in its Sindh and Balochistan provinces. Agencies monitoring Pakistan's
coastal areas, and these include the Pakistan Navy, Maritime Security
Agency and Pakistan Coast Guard. The Coast Guard is responsible
for patrolling the port of Karachi and the Makran coast in Balochistan.
It has standing jurisdiction for 12 nautical miles to sea and 50
miles inland.
Despite the presence of these agencies, coalition forces
feel that when the conservative Taliban regime was dislodged in
Afghanistan in December 2001, scores of Arab militants belonging
to the brigades of the international terrorist network managed to
flee from the mountains to the unguarded coastlines of Pakistan
and Iran, and escaped by small boats to the Gulf, Yemen and the
Horn of Africa. The international community now fears that Bin Laden's
terrorist network still continues to use the Pakistani coastal limits
for the movement of its cadres and for smuggling weapons and drugs
to raise funds for its activities.
Experts
on the subject maintain that it is virtually impossible for the
poorly equipped Pakistani agencies to keep vigil over the huge Pakistan
coastal zone. "At the most, the patrols from these agencies
go from 10 to 40 nautical miles in the deep sea and that too not
in the entire zone," says Mohammed Iqbal Sheikh, general secretary,
Pakistan Merchant Navy Officers' Association. "Most navy ships
patrol during the day and anchor their vessels by sunset. In this
situation, it is easy for anyone to elude the patrol."
"We are neither adequately equipped nor did we anticipate
the rise in global terrorism and the illicit movement of people
by sea," admits an official of the Pakistan Coastguard. "Besides,
it's not just a question of equipment. The men working in these
agencies have not even been given any special training to deal with
the changing global realities."
These
experts say Al-Qaeda cadres had been using the sea routes of Pakistan
to flee to the Gulf and also to smuggle drugs and gold to generate
funds for the terrorist network. Evidence has been found which indicates
that militants use the coastal areas of Ibrahim Hyderi and Lath
Basti, in Karachi, as a launching pad. Only last year Pakistani
intelligence agencies conducted a raid in a village surrounding
Karachi's coastal areas after a tip-off and arrested a couple of
Taliban militants who were planning to escape to the Gulf on small
ships.
Prior to 9/11, air routes had been used to transport Al-Qaeda cadres.
"They had people forging travel documents for them, assisting
them in obtaining visas to travel to different destinations by air,"
says a local police official, who arrested one of the local contacts
who was involved in forging documents. Al-Qaeda militants had to
go for other options, including sea routes, when it became next
to impossible to use the air routes.
Insiders
maintain that Al-Qaeda did not have a network in the coastal areas
till 9/11, and it explored this option after the dislodging of the
Taliban regime. A local, who owns a couple of fishing boats in Karachi,
said that soon after the fall of the Taliban regime, three youth,
two Egyptians and a young man from Sudan, turned up at his house
in Karachi's coastal areas along with a local militant from one
of the parties outlawed by General Musharraf. They sought his help
to provide shelter for a while as well as to assist them in crossing
over to Saudi Arabia by a small boat or launch. "You don't
need to worry about the money. We are ready to pay whatever costs
are incurred on this journey," he was told by the local militant
who was accompanying them.
According to him, these Arabs were really desperate to cross
over to Saudi Arabia by sea. "They were very well-informed.
They knew that it would be more difficult to go to Dubai or even
to Muscat (Oman) via the Gwadar coastal areas of Balochistan province.
They were aware that the authorities in Dubai as well as in Muscat
had become vigilant and were keeping an eye on these vessels because
the practice of human smuggling had snowballed over the years,"
he said. They wanted to cross over to Saudi Arabia through an alternate
route. Realising that it was a very dangerous game, the local said
he refused to oblige them.
Later, however, these cadres apparently managed to cut a
deal with human smugglers to facilitate the journey. "It is
an open secret that hundreds of youth belonging to the Al-Qaeda,
who were hiding in Afghanistan and Pakistan, managed to sneak into
Iraq when the war started," says a security official, adding,
"How do you think Al-Qaeda managed to send its cadres to Iraq?
Obviously either by the land route via Iran and Turkey or else by
sea." He said that they had enough evidence to believe that
human smugglers assisted Al-Qaeda and its cadres in crossing by
sea. "These people work only for money and you know that Al-Qaeda
has no dearth of funds," he says.
Evidence indicates that Al-Qaeda has recently used these
sea routes more to smuggle heroin, hashish and other drugs to the
west for raising funds than in transporting cadres. The recent bumper
poppy crop in Afghanistan as well as in the lawless tribal areas
of Pakistan has been used for this purpose.
International agencies fighting the drug trade estimate a
record level yield of 4,600 tons in Afghanistan, which is more than
the cultivation in the rest of the world put together, during the
last year. Similarly, tons of poppy were cultivated in the FATA
(Federally Administered Tribal Areas) and PATA (Provincially Administered
Tribal Areas) areas in Pakistan's North-West Frontier province.
"Al-Qaeda and local militants in Pakistan linked to Al-Qaeda
were involved in the smuggling of heroin and hashish to Europe both
by regular ship containers as well as private launches," says
a source.
The
common routes for this kind of trade include the overland route
from Pakistan's Balochistan province through to Iran's northwestern
region. From there, drugs are smuggled into Turkey and onward to
Europe.
The port of Karachi is the largest and busiest in the region,
moving containerised cargo, as well as bulk goods, into and out
of Pakistan. These sources maintain that heroin and hashish are
moved through the country by road and rail to the seaport and concealed
in legitimate shipments. Specially constructed suitcases are available
that incorporate illicit substances such as heroin into the structure.
Couriers also saturate clothing, books, and absorbent products with
heroin solutions. These couriers travel to destinations in Africa,
often via the UAE or other locations from Pakistan.
A senior police official in Karachi reveals that two young
men belonging to an outlawed group, who were captured recently,
disclosed during interrogation that they had managed to smuggle
two tons of hashish to Belgium, with the down market value of millions
of dollars. "In fact they helped a Pathan from the tribal areas
of Pakistan in smuggling the hashish and charged him a million rupees
for the service," he said. According to the official, they
justify the smuggling of hashish to Europe and other western countries,
on the basis that it will be consumed by 'infidel' non-Muslims.
These smugglers, who chose the non-formal routes for smuggling
through coastal zones, reportedly use novel methods to smuggle the
drugs to different destinations. They put the drugs into gunny or
plastic bags, and place a few layers of solid plastic on each bag
to make it waterproof. They take a rope out from the middle of this
bag and attach the rope to the bottom of the ship. "Even if
an agency intervenes, and searches the ship, they won't be able
to spot these items," says an insider.
He maintains that in most cases small boats go out to sea
to assess the situation. "In case they think that there is
some serious operation underway, they unload their smuggled items
on islands in the sea and collect them later, and proceed further
once they realise that the coast is clear," he contends.
Most of the men who operate these vessels are experts and
have good know-how of the sea routes. "At times they don't
even have navigational gadgets, but simply find their way in the
deep sea through the stars in the sky," says a local shipowner.
Experts in the shipping industry maintain that smuggling
heroin and guns through non-formal routes is not something new.
It was always there and anyone, at any time, can take advantage
of it. The global maritime industry worldwide is still unregulated
and can be easily exploited. Since no new policies have been adopted
nor extra security measures taken worldwide, this can become dangerous.
"What if the terrorists use these unregulated ships, load any
kind of bombs or missiles on them and carry out terrorist attacks
against their targets?" asks the ship owner. He believes that
it is always possible for a major terrorist attack to be carried
out through the sea routes.
Shipping sources lay the blame for the unregulated shipping
business at the doorstep of shipowners in the west, especially in
Greece and the USA. "They continue to register their ships
under phoney names in the poorer countries of Africa and Asia,"
says a source. According to him, they manage to evade labour laws
and taxes in the western countries in this way. For example, he
explains, if a shipowner registers a ship in the USA, he is supposed
to pay wages to crew members in accordance with US labour laws.
"Each crew member is entitled to get at least 50 US dollars
per day for meals alone. In order to avoid this, they register their
ships in Africa and employ people from impoverished countries, and
pay between five to 10 dollars a day to crew members for meals."
According to some reports, U.S. intelligence officials identified
15 cargo freighters around the world, which they believe are either
controlled by the Al-Qaeda or could be used by the terrorist network
to ferry operatives, bombs, money or commodities over the high seas.
"American spy agencies track some of the suspicious
ships by satellite or surveillance planes and with the help of allied
navies or informants in overseas ports. They have, however, occasionally
lost track of the vessels, which are continuously given new fictitious
names, repainted or re-registered using the names of fictitious
corporate owners, all the while plying the oceans," says the
report.
"It is not difficult at all to change the flags, names
or even colour of these freighters at any time. This practice was
started by shipping industry owners in the west and they should
now be ready to pay the price," says a maritime official in
Pakistan.
However, sources say the Pakistan government's decision to
allow the coalition to monitor its waters may hamper the activities
of the Al-Qaeda for a while, but it cannot put a complete stop to
their movements. "These measures will create a psychological
impact, but they know well enough that the Al-Qaeda can dodge the
international agencies and devise new methods to carry on its activities,"
says a shipping expert. He emphasises the need to regulate the shipping
industry to save the world from another 9/11.
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