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"We do not approve or support that crews be armed," Choong said. "Once you start arming the crew, then the pirates will start shooting the crew, even an unarmed crew. ... Once that is done you will have more problems because the crew will start shooting at other ships." Avoiding the Gulf of Aden is neither time- nor cost-effective, he said, though two prominent shipping companies
-- including A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S -- last year ordered slower ships to sail around Africa's Cape of Good Hope, a move that can lengthen routes by as much as 40 percent. Three months into an international anti-piracy campaign, as many as 17 nations are participating in increased patrols and more are expected to join. But according to the U.S. Navy, it would take 61 ships to control the shipping route in the Gulf of Aden, which is just a fraction of the 1.1 million square miles (2.85 million square kilometers) where the pirates have operated. A U.S.-backed international anti-piracy coalition currently has 12 to 16 ships patrolling the region at any one time. "The pirates are having a field day, attacking ships freely," Choong said. "At the moment, the risks are very small and the rewards are very high."
[Associated
Press;
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