Somali Pirates Getting Help From International Law, Global Jihadists

The Indian navy just got done sinking a pirated fishing vessel that still had the captured crew tied up below deck. Definitely an awkward move on the IN's part - but more or less inevitable given how they've been straining against the least of Western legal niceties:
Are the U.S. and her allies being too gentle with Somalia's pirates? That's the accusation from Indian retired Rear Admiral Raja Menon. NATO's rules of engagement -- when their ships can fire, and when the can't -- "worries more about the human rights of the pirates, than about stamping out piracy," Menon writes in the New Indian Express. "... Today’s interpretation by human rights lawyers state that pirates cannot even be handed over to their own state if that state does not respect the human rights of the pirates. This is an absurd situation." I'm hearing, second-hand, that Western sailors are making similar complaints.
Just in case you're curious, this is the kind of nonsense he's talking about:
Article 110 of the U.N.'s Law of the Sea Convention -- ratified by most nations, but not by the U.S. -- enjoins naval ships from simply firing on suspected pirates. Instead, they are required first to send over a boarding party to inquire of the pirates whether they are, in fact, pirates. A recent U.N. Security Council resolution allows foreign navies to pursue pirates into Somali waters ... but the resolution expires next week. As for the idea of laying waste, Stephen Decatur-like, to the pirate's prospering capital port city of Eyl, this too would require U.N. authorization. Yesterday, a shippers' organization asked NATO to blockade the Somali coast. NATO promptly declined.
The pirates are cooperating with international terrorist groups, are getting information from terrorist sympathizers in Yemen, are drawing reinforcements from jihadists in Somalia, and are expressing their "love" for Saudi Arabia. I mention this only because certain foreign policy sophisticates have begun suggesting that the pirates are opposed to partisans of political Islam. This claim seems, all things considered, less than tenuous:
Then again maybe NATO's right. As the AP helpfully reminded everyone last week, attacking pirates is only an example of "yet more violence."
References:
* Indian Frigate 1, Pirate 'Mother Ship' 0 [Danger Room]
* India. Pirate 'mothership' was fishing boat [Ottawa Citizen]
* NATO Treats Pirates with Kid Gloves: Indian Admiral (Updated) [Danger Room]
* Why Don't We Hang Pirates Anymore? [WSJ]
* How to end piracy [Hot Air]
* Pirates, Terrorists, in Cahoots? [Danger Room]
* Pirates Get Ships Routes From Yemen [Jawa]
* Somalia "Pirates" Calling In More "Troops" [Jawa]
* Somailia "Pirates": "We Love Saudi Arabia But Need To Recover Hijacking Cost" [Jawa]
Previously:
* Somali Pirates Now Seizing Oil-Filled Supertankers (Plus: Genuinely Disgusting British Apologism For Somali Jihadists)
* Iranian "Ship Of Death" Conspiracy Theories... Umm... Firmly Debunked? (Plus: Somali Pirates And Islamist Militias, However, Are Real)
* Hey Gals, Check This Out - If You're A 13 Year Old Gang Rape Victim In Somalia, You Have To Die








