38 Navies, 27 Coast Guards converge for Global Maritime Security Confab in Abuja – Peterside.

The Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has disclosed that a robust collection of international maritime security stakeholders have confirmed their attendance at the Global Maritime Security Conference (GMSC) slated for Abuja from October 7 to October 9.

The conference is organised to address pertinent security issues in the Gulf of Guinea maritime domain.

Speaking in Abuja, the NIMASA DG decried the scourge of maritime insecurity, especially in the Gulf of Guinea noting that there was an urgent need for international collaboration to tackle the menace.

He said the conference would come up with a formal declaration on solutions to maritime insecurity in the Gulf of Guinea.

“Dealing with the issues of piracy and maritime crime requires inter-agency collaboration as well as regional collaboration between sister agencies in the participating countries,” he stated.,

Dakuku who is also Chairman of the Association of African Maritime Administrations (AAMA), added, “This is a tactical conference between developing countries, developed countries and high international partners to find solution to a problem that is affecting global commerce.

“Ninety per cent of commerce is conducted via seaborne trade, so whatever affects seaborne trade affects global commerce and has direct impact on development and quality of living of a people.

“At the end of the conference, we are expected to come up with the Abuja Declaration on Maritime Security in the Gulf of Guinea, which will be a document that will be a consensus agreement of all participants regarding what needs to be done to address the deteriorating situation. There will be a defined roadmap to deal with maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea.”

Speaking in a live interview on the Nigerian Television Authority, he noted that getting global institutions, bilateral and multilateral agencies, and nations of the world to partner in order to make a clear statement on how to deal with the security challenges in the Gulf of Guinea was the ultimate goal of the forum.

The conference which is being hosted by the Federal Ministry of Transportation, in collaboration with the Nigerian Navy, is the first of its kind on the Gulf of Guinea and follows in the tradition of similar events held globally.

“The objectives of the conference include defining the precise nature and scope of coordinated regional responses to maritime insecurity, evaluating the relevance of various external interventions, and moving towards policy harmonisation and regional cooperation”.

“The conference will also tackle cyber security threats, while advocating deeper global commitment to the deployment of resources for ending maritime insecurity in the Gulf of Guinea region in the shortest time possible.”

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