Countries in the Gulf of Guinea (GoG) must domesticate international laws to combat maritime crimes in the region, Commodore Samuel Ayelazono, Flag Officer Fleet of the Ghana Navy has stated.

He said with the domestication of the laws countries would be able to prosecute offenders of maritime crimes and respond to challenges in the sector.

“Ghana was one of the countries to sign unto the United Nations on the laws of the Sea (UNCLOS) but do not have laws on piracy to deal with such crimes,” he added.

He said this at a-five day training on maritime security reporting for journalists and maritime security professionals which commenced at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC) in Accra, yesterday.

The training seeks to enhance the capacities of maritime secu­rity agencies as well as maritime security practitioners to understand, collaborate and report accurately on maritime issues and supports efforts to reduce maritime criminal­ity in the region.

It also aims at enhancing the knowledge base skills of media and maritime security professionals to effectively contribute to the attain­ment of maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea.

Sponsored by the Danish Government and forms part of a five-year project on “integrated responses to threats to maritime safety and security in the Gulf of Guinea (GoG) Domain in West and Central Africa.”

Participants included journal­ists, media liaisons and maritime security actors from maritime institutions from the Navy, Marine Police, Maritime Authority and Port Administration across West Africa and Central Africa.

Commodore Ayelazono said $1billion dollars was lost in the region annually as a result of activ­ities illegal unregulated unreported (IUU).

He mentioned some of the trans-national crimes in the mari­time sector in the region as money laundering, proliferation illicit trade, IUU fishing, terrorism, piracy, armed robbery weapon and drug trafficking.