Inteligencia y Seguridad Frente Externo En Profundidad Economia y Finanzas Transparencia
  En Parrilla Medio Ambiente Sociedad High Tech Contacto
Inteligencia y Seguridad  
 
02/05/2013 | 'The cannons are just for show': Ex-Royal navy officer denies he was off to fight Somali pirates after his heavily-armoured boat was impounded in Spain

Daily Mail Staff

Former gunboat has been stopped by Spanish authorities near Tenerife. It has been inspected five times in less than a week . Spanish fear the boat may have been on its way to fight Somali pirates. But owner Chris Enmarch claims cannons on boat are 'totally unusable'. He said Spanish authorities had 'made a big fuss about nothing'.

 

An ex-Royal Navy officer has claimed reports that he was heading to Somalia to fight pirates are 'nonsense'

Former lieutenant Chris Enmarch’s decommissioned gunboat Defender raised suspicions among Spanish authorities last week after he was forced to stop off in Tenerife for repairs.

Civil Guard officers have carried out five inspections of the vessel and have refused to allow the heavily armoured converted warship to sail.

But Mr Enmarch, 53, of Penryn, Cornwall, said the Spanish authorities were making a 'fuss about nothing' and said the cannons on his boat were 'just for show and totally unusable'.

Following background checks on Mr Enmarsh, the Spanish authorities are believed to have been concerned by comments he made to a local newspaper in Essex in 2011 that he intended to arm it for shipping and oil rig protection.

He told the Maldon Chronicle in November 2011: ‘Defender’s task will be to deter any pirates intent on boarding the many ships that pass the East African coastline. One look at her should be enough to send them looking for easier targets.

‘She will be manned by handpicked ex-Royal Marine Commandos and run as a professional naval ship, obeying the rules of engagement.

‘Our primary task will be to protect oil platforms which are towed close to the coast of East Africa, and a number of oil companies want to hire Defender to look after their interests.

‘We are not mercenaries; this is strictly a business venture similar to other British private protection firms which operate in Iraq and Afghanistan.’

But yesterday Mr Enmarsh told The Times it was a 'fuss about nothing' and said the Spanish authorities had gone 'totally overboard over nothing whatsoever.'

He said: ‘The reports of us heading to Somalia are nonsense. We would not have come down this way if our destination was the Horn of Africa. There are quicker routes to get there.

‘We are on our way from England to Senegal to discuss with the authorities there the possible use of the Defender as a deterrent against illegal fishing boats.

'The idea is that one look at us and anyone who should not be fishing there will think twice about staying.

‘We have been searched from top to bottom and nothing improper has been found. The only reason we have to stay is because the inspectors say our on-board safety equipment is not up to standard.

‘We need to get new fire extinguishers and some other items before we are cleared to depart. The crew have not been detained in any way.’

The 127ft boat, which weighs 135 tons, was built in Lowestoft, Suffolk, in the mid-Seventies as a fast attack craft for the Sultan of Oman’s navy in the Gulf.

The ship was decommissioned in 2002. Mr Enmarch is thought to have bought it two years ago.

Local maritime officials impounded the vessel last week after an inspection found ‘administrative irregularities’ and security issues relating to life-saving equipment.

The drama began on Tuesday, April 23 when the Defender made an unplanned stopover in the resort of Los Cristianos after blowing a gasket.

It was boarded by Spanish Civil Guard officers and refused permission to stay there. The vessel was then escorted to a berth 50 miles away at Santa Cruz port by a Spanish navy warship.

Officials are understood to have been suspicious that the formidable looking vessel, which flies the British flag, was registered as a pleasure boat.

The boat has been inspected five times but officials have refused the skipper permission to sail. Mr Enmarch and his five-man crew have not been held.

Mr Enmarch said yesterday that only he and one other crewman had served in the Armed Forces.

The Spanish ministry of defence said an inspection had revealed ‘irregularities in the paperwork of the boat and its crew, as well as deficiencies in safety equipment’


Daily Mail (Reino Unido)

 


Otras Notas Relacionadas... ( Records 1 to 10 of 45 )
fecha titulo
19/12/2013 ''Captain Phillips'' reminds of the need for all hands onboard in maritime security
05/10/2013 The steep curve ahead in fighting Gulf of Guinea piracy
03/10/2013 International Union of Marine Insurance (IUMI) and Piracy
03/10/2013 Corruption Will Make Suppressing Pirates Very Difficult in West Africa
30/09/2013 «En mi región, hemos erradicado completamente la piratería»
17/09/2013 Report a Piracy Attack in Togo. Get Arrested
05/09/2013 How the War on Piracy Became Big Business
29/08/2013 New and old challenges posed by the pirates of the Gulf of Guinea
27/08/2013 Fending Off Pirates: Depending on West African States to Help Won't Count For Much
08/08/2013 The Maritime Security Industry in the Market of Today and Tomorrow


Otras Notas del Autor
fecha
Título
03/05/2017|
27/10/2013|
03/09/2013|
15/05/2013|
06/07/2011|
06/07/2011|
21/03/2011|
28/08/2009|
04/11/2008|
04/11/2008|
16/01/2008|

ver + notas
 
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Freedom House