Gulf News

Satellite could help combat pirates

Ivory Coast considers move as it steps up security measures in bid to combat regional threats

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Pirates operate in the Gulf of Guinea, where Nigeria, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and other nations produce about three million barrels of oil a day. Boko Haram, the militant group most prevalent in northeast Nigeria, has threatened to destabilis­e the region with attacks.

Ivory Coast is considerin­g launching a satellite to combat security threats from pirates in the Gulf of Guinea and Islamist militants in the West African region, Telecommun­ications Minister Bruno Kone said.

“We’ve decided to conduct a technical and economic study that will tell us the relevance of such a project,” Kone said by phone on June 17 from Abidjan, the commercial capital.

The West African nation is currently leasing capacity from commercial satellites and will calculate whether using its own could be cheaper, he said.

“Given our needs and how much it costs every year, wouldn’t it be more profitable for us to have our own satellite?” Kone said, adding that the decision will probably be taken by the government this year. “It’s necessary to provide ourselves the means to follow” security threats more closely, he said.

Pirates operate in the Gulf of Guinea, where Nigeria, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and other nations produce about three million barrels of oil a day. Boko Haram, the militant group most prevalent in northeast Nigeria, has threatened to destabilis­e the region with attacks and kidnapping­s, while armed men on motorbikes ambushed a security-force station in southern Mali near the border of Ivory Coast on June 10, killing one officer.

Ivory Coast, the world’s largest producer of cocoa and second-largest grower of cashew nuts, could also use a satellite for corporate and government communicat­ions, agricultur­e and weather forecasts, Kone said. The nation’s economy is expected to grow by 7.7 per cent this year, compared with an average of 4.5 per cent for subSaharan African countries, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

If there were free capacity, mobile-phone companies such as MTN Group Ltd. and Orange SA, Ivory Coast’s two biggest wireless carriers, could also use the satellite, Kone said.

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