MAF investigates Taranaki food retailers regarding fish supply
Restaurants and takeaways need to do their bit to shut down black-market fish trade and support both sustainable
fisheries and food safety, the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry is warning.
MAF compliance staff are executing authorities to enter (similar to warrants) at several private properties and retail
outlets in Taranaki this week as part of Operation Deep 7.
Local Fishery Officers became aware of breaches of the Fisheries Act when they undertook surveillance of some
restaurants and fish-and-chip shops in New Plymouth and the surrounding area in late 2011.
MAF District Compliance Manager Mike Green says they found that some food retailers readily purchased fish outside the
Quota Management System (QMS).
During the investigation phase, nine food outlets purchased more than 150 kilograms of paua and wet fish – all outside
the provisions of the Fisheries Act 1996.
“Some of these operators have purposely evaded the fisheries record-keeping regulations and dealt with fish for cash
under the table.
“We are especially disappointed knowing that each of them were well aware of the rules around buying fish as all of them
had been visited by Fishery Officers in the past.
“The food retailers were prepared to flout the Fisheries Act and not comply with the regulations that were in place to
protect sustainable fisheries management and commercial fishers’ livelihood.
“These food retailers’ actions contribute to and help to support the black-market trade of fish product. Poachers or
fish thieves are an ongoing problem for Fishery Officers and it is only made more difficult because of the ready market
these operators create.”
Mr Green says these food retailers also did not know enough about the history of the products they were buying, such as
how they had been stored, and they therefore would not necessarily know they were safe for people to eat.
Fishery Officers from Wellington, Napier and Taranaki have assisted with the two-day execution phase of the operation
this week. As a result of the inquiries several of the food outlet operators will face serious charges under the
Fisheries Act 1996 and will be liable for fines up to $250,000 and possibly imprisonment.
ENDS