4, April 2019
Four seafarers snatched in Cameroon pirate attack 0
Four crew members have been seized by pirates following an attack on the Contship Oak containership off the coast of Cameron in the Gulf of Guinea.
According to Maritime Bulletin, the vessel was at anchorage when pirates boarded it and kidnapped the crewmembers.
The 1,118 TEU vessel, owned by carrier Contship, then continued to the Port of Douala, Cameron, where as of April 2 it remains docked.
According to reports, the attack took place on March 30, 2019, just days after US-organised anti-piracy drills had taken place in the region.
The Obangame Express 2019 took place on March 22, 2019, and saw 2500 naval service members, 95 vessels and 12 aircraft prepare for acts of piracy.
Several NATO members also participated, as did the US Coast Guard cutter Thetis. The exercises come after several attacks in the Gulf of Guinea, which has deteriorated into the world’s most dangerous area for commercial shipping.
According to the International Maritime Bureau (IMB), the region suffered 201 attacks in 2018, an increase from the 180 that occurred in 2017.
The most high-profile act of piracy took place in January 2019, as the MSC Mandy was attacked 55 nautical miles off the coast of Benin, a story PTI reported on.
Source: Porttechnology.org
4, April 2019
Cameroon-Central Africa traffic resumes, after about a month of suspension 0
Freight transport between Cameroon and the Central African Republic via the border city of Garoua-Boulaï, western part of Cameroon, resumed March 28 after about a month of suspension.
The good news is owing to a decision by Central African rebels to break camp at that border they blocked since March 3 to protest against the appointment of the new Prime Minister in their country. Camp was broken after a dialogue was open between parties in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Therefore, the hundreds of trucks loaded with goods, which had been immobilized for several weeks, both in Cameroonian and Central African territory, have now resumed operations.
According to official Cameroonian customs statistics, about XAF55 billion worth of Central African goods transit Cameroon each year.
Source: Business in Cameroon