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PoBoy321
10-19-2005, 09:52 PM
Piracy was clearly a huge problem during the 16-1700s. Much of our literature and history from that period of time revolves around piracy. However, it seems that piracy is not as prevalent in our present day as it was a few hundred years ago.

I ask, has piracy been eradicated, or has it simply evolved into other forms of crime?

10-19-2005, 09:55 PM
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has piracy been eradicated,

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Nope, just the other day a pirate stole my bike.

HopeydaFish
10-19-2005, 09:55 PM
[ QUOTE ]
Piracy was clearly a huge problem during the 16-1700s. Much of our literature and history from that period of time revolves around piracy. However, it seems that piracy is not as prevalent in our present day as it was a few hundred years ago.

I ask, has piracy been eradicated, or has it simply evolved into other forms of crime?

[/ QUOTE ]

There is still plenty of piracy in certain parts of the world. South-east Asia, the horn of Africa, and South America all have problems with piracy.

David04
10-19-2005, 10:02 PM
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has piracy been eradicated,

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Nope, just the other day Klepton stole my bike.

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FYP.

10-19-2005, 10:07 PM
[ QUOTE ]
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has piracy been eradicated,

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Nope, just the other day Klepton stole my bike.

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FYP.

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Does Klepton have an eye patch, wooden leg and say "gimme yur wallet arghhhhhh"?

David04
10-19-2005, 10:10 PM
[ QUOTE ]
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[ QUOTE ]
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has piracy been eradicated,

[/ QUOTE ]

Nope, just the other day Klepton stole my bike.

[/ QUOTE ]
FYP.

[/ QUOTE ]

Does Klepton have an eye patch, wooden leg and say "gimme yur wallet arghhhhhh"?

[/ QUOTE ]
Nope. Just your typical, run-of-the-mill bike thief.

theghost
10-19-2005, 10:18 PM
Story (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-1824954,00.html)

Warlords take piracy to new extreme
By Jonathan Clayton - October 14, 2005
Spread of instability is feared as food aid is stolen






HEAVILY armed pirates have turned the waters off the Horn of Africa into one of the most dangerous shipping zones in the world.

A recent increase in piracy attacks, both at sea and in port, is threatening food aid for up to a million people in Somalia and has increased fears that disorder in the lawless country — which has not had any government since 1991 — could spread instability and fear throughout the Indian Ocean region.

Gunmen hijacked a United Nations-chartered vessel, the MV Miltzow, on Tuesday in the southern port of Merca, 60 miles south of Mogadishu, and forced the crew to sail towards Kenya. It was the second such attack in less than 24 hours.



Leo van der Velden, the deputy director for the United Nations World Food Programme in Somalia, said: “Talks are under way between the owners and the hijackers. These people are just stealing food out of the mouths of suffering fellow Somalis.”

The MV Miltzow was sighted yesterday off the small fishing port of Brava, about 50 miles south of Merca, which is a known refuge of a local militia gang. The hijackers usually demand a hefty ransom for the return of the crew and vessel, but always keep the cargo. If the owners do not pay, the crew may be held hostage for months and even killed.

Three Taiwanese fishing vessels and their crews have been held hostage on an island off the southern port of Kismayu for nearly six months.

The increased number of attacks is blamed on previous pay-offs and a decline in opportunities for criminal activity elsewhere as aid organisations have reduced their onshore operations because of the lack of security.

The International Maritime Bureau describes Somalia’s piracy problem as “the most serious in the world”. It reports that there have been 21 incidents off the Somali coast since March 15, making it as dangerous a stretch of water for piracy as the infamous Strait of Malacca in the Far East.

Since the fall of the dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991, Somalia territory has been carved up between rival warlords and their militias. And since the start of the US-led war against terrorism, radical Islamic fugitives, some from Yemen and Afghanistan, have made Somalia even more dangerous for Westerners.

Weapons used in bomb attacks in Kenya and elsewhere in East Africa have been identified as having come from Somalia. Three East African suspects in the attempted London bombings of July 21 all had links with the country. Recent violence on the Indian Ocean island of Zanzibar has also been linked to Somalia.

Unscrupulous fishing companies, many with connections to Japan, China and Taiwan, have for years paid backhanders to Somalia’s regional warlords for the right to fish the waters off their respective fiefdoms. Flush with easy pickings from that trade, warlords recently began seizing commercial vessels.

The MV Torgelow, a cargo ship, was seized on Monday off the southern Somali coast as it headed north towards the ruined capital and main port of Mogadishu. Its fate is not yet known.

MURKY WATERS

In the “Golden Age” of piracy — 1650 to 1720 — thousands of ships were attacked and robbed

Edward Thatch, aka Blackbeard, was one of the most notorious pirates, causing terror on the Caribbean Sea between 1716 and 1718

Two women pirates, Anne Bonny and Mary Read, used men’s clothes as a disguise. They escaped execution because of pregnancy

The Caribbean Sea and American coast were attractive as Spanish ships returned to Europe loaded with cargo

Today piracy is rife in the Malacca Straits, off Nigeria, Singapore, Aden, Brazil and Haiti

Since March 15 there have been 22 reported incidents off the Somali coast — one of today’s most dangerous places for piracy
Sources: International Maritime Bureau, National Maritime Museum


(edited to show date of publication)

Dominic
10-19-2005, 10:26 PM
I used to be a pirate in the South Seas...but business was slaow. Hence,the move to porn.

vulturesrow
10-19-2005, 10:28 PM
</font><blockquote><font class="small">En respuesta a:</font><hr />
Piracy was clearly a huge problem during the 16-1700s. Much of our literature and history from that period of time revolves around piracy. However, it seems that piracy is not as prevalent in our present day as it was a few hundred years ago.

I ask, has piracy been eradicated, or has it simply evolved into other forms of crime?

[/ QUOTE ]


Last time I was in Key West I saw a ton of ass pirates...

Sponger15SB
10-19-2005, 10:38 PM
[ QUOTE ]
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has piracy been eradicated,

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Nope, just the other day Klepton stole my bike.

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FYP.

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Does Klepton have an eye patch, wooden leg and say "gimme yur wallet arghhhhhh"?

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No but this guy does...

http://www.dailynexus.com/story_images/2003-06-25/jh25ju03hmless-hthcare.jpg

http://www.dailynexus.com/opinion/2005/10132.html

jakethebake
10-19-2005, 10:52 PM
There are lots of pirates down in the caribbean actually. When I was a comerical fisherman in the late 80s we actually carried an Uzi, a stainless steel 10 guage, and a few other firearms on the boat for tha very reason.

KaneKungFu123
10-19-2005, 11:08 PM
[ QUOTE ]
There are lots of pirates down in the caribbean actually. When I was a comerical fisherman in the late 80s we actually carried an Uzi, a stainless steel 10 guage, and a few other firearms on the boat for tha very reason.

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there are still pirates off of asia/africa.