There are various types of ships – they
sail from place to place, port to port, Country to Country – encounters heavy
weather, there could trouble including financial trouble for the owners – there
are times when they get mired in legal tangle – get attacked by Pirates, face
the perils of the sea and more…… but the
story of Libertad seems to be much different as it is kept in bounds while
trying to tuck sea pirates.
ARA Libertad ( IMO: 6125398) is a tall
ship which serves as a school ship in the Argentine Navy. She was built in the
1950s at the Río Santiago Shipyard near La
Plata , Argentina .
Her maiden voyage was in 1962, and she continues to be a school ship with
yearly instruction voyages for the graduating naval cadets. A training ship is a ship used to train
students as sailors. The hands-on aspect provided by sail training provides
immense value to the students.
The vessel is in news for wrong reasons –
earlier this month, the vessel was
seized in Ghana because of
debts to NML Capital, a subsidiary of US
hedge fund Elliott Management Corporation, one of Argentina 's former creditors. Argentina 's
foreign ministry condemned the move as "a stunt" pulled by
"vulture funds" which contravenes the Geneva Convention. It is claimed that Argentina defaulted on more than
$100bn (£62bn) of debt in 2001 and 2002, the biggest default in history. The
majority of these loans were restructured in 2005 and 2010, giving creditors
around 30% of their money back. Less than 8 percent of creditors are
relentlessly pursuing the Argentine government through the courts in order to
recover the full amount.
Nearly three weeks after the seizure in Ghana at the behest of a US hedge fund,
there is no liberty for the Libertad.
The imposing tall ship, its white sails furled and flags fluttering over
its masts, has been stuck in Tema ,
Ghana ’s biggest
seaport, since October 2. Meanwhile, Argentina has mobilised diplomats,
officials and lawyers to try to find a way out of an embarrassing impasse that
could drag on past Christmas. Héctor
Timerman, the foreign minister, said Argentina
would exhaust all legal avenues in Ghana and, “if necessary, will go
to the United Nations”. Ironically, the Libertad, which usually plies only safe
South American waters, was originally scheduled to stop in Nigeria . The
route was switched to Ghana
two weeks before it set sail in June amid diplomatic concern at the risk of
attacks by pirates.
The Capital Management Fund reportedly
tracked its voyage via the internet and
pounced on the vessel when it docked at Tema.
NML filed an injunction to have the ship seized – the most spectacular
tactic yet in the quest by the US so-called “vulture fund” to wring payment
from Argentina for bonds still unpaid since the South American nation’s 2001
default on nearly $100bn. Argentina immediately blasted the seizure as a stunt
by “unscrupulous financiers” and adopted the combative style it has stuck to
when dealing with “holdout” creditors who refused two bond swaps in 2005 and
2010.
US and UK courts have awarded $1.6bn in
claims in NML’s favour and the fund is one of several creditors suing for full
recovery of assets. Furthermore, Argentina still owes some $9bn to
the Paris Club of western creditor nations.
The Govt spokesperson stated that Buenos
Aires would never negotiate with vulture funds, he
added. Nonetheless, the Libertad debacle is a serious embarrassment. Officials have scrambled to pass the buck for
the decision to dock in Ghana ;
the head of the navy and two senior officials have been sacked in the wake of
the seizure and the director of military intelligence has also quit. Argentina has dispatched its deputy foreign and
defence ministers to Accra
for urgent negotiations. It is evaluating a legal strategy that could involve
appealing to international courts.
At Ghana ,
they hold the view that this is not an issue of Ghana versus Argentine but a
classic case of International commercial law.
Newspaper reports suggest that Argentina has refused to post a
$20m bond that could release the ship, valued at up to $15m and a former holder
of the world speed record for a transatlantic crossing by sail, which is
racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in port fees. The 285 strong crew struck up are reportedly
killing time playing football and shopping.
Many feel that this could be a landmark
arrest and could set important
precedents and send ominous signs to other defaulters including Greek.
Presently the ground is the Court in Accra where the Argentinian Govt seeks order
for release of the ship. Ruling is
expected to be out soon. Meantime,
there are reports that Argentina
has ordered its close to 300 sailors to evacuate the navy training
ship. One of their pleas before the
Court is that the crew's rights have
been violated after a Ghanaian judge refused to allow the refuelling of the
ship to maintain the power supply. Upon
evacuation, there would be a small contingent of crew along with Captain enough
to maintain the vessel.
The scene of action Ghana ,
officially the Republic of Ghana , is a country in West Africa, bordered by Côte
d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast ),
Burkina Faso , Togo and Gulf of Guinea . The word Ghana means "Warrior
King" and is derived from the ancient Ghana Empire.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
22nd Oct 2012.
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