LegaSea renews calls for a full inquiry into MPI activity
LegaSea renews calls for a full inquiry into MPI activity
When the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) failed to prosecute industrial fishing boat captains for dumping catch it blamed legal advice for the decision.
Now we are told that legal advice never existed. Instead, MPI used misleading information and misdirected both the Minister and the public as to why blatant dumping of fish recorded on camera went unprosecuted. The only reason this has now come to light is because the Chief Ombudsman’s Office has forced MPI to reveal the information after repeated attempts to get the truth of the matter by media, LegaSea and the public.
LegaSea spokesman Scott Macindoe says while the initial decision not to prosecute was bad enough, hiding the information compounds the problem. “Clearly MPI is a ministry totally captured by industry, totally unable to operate in the manner required both by the law and by the public of New Zealand, and totally unable to manage New Zealand’s fisheries.”
LegaSea believes only a fully independent, external inquiry into MPI’s role in fisheries management will be enough to restore public faith in the Ministry. “We already have three reports that demonstrate MPI’s unwillingness to prosecute when there is clear evidence of illegal activity. Now we have a Ministry unwilling and seemingly unable to own up to its own mistakes, instead it has to be forced to do the right thing. We know there are at least 14 more reports that independent researchers are eager to see which MPI is refusing to release and we can’t help but wonder what else is being hidden behind closed doors.
“MPI has awarded the contract for putting cameras on boats to the industry it monitors, it has allowed an industry-owned entity to take over the day-to-day data collection from commercial fishers and the only assurance we receive from MPI is that it’s all going to be OK because MPI will act if there’s any sign of illegal activity. Unfortunately, MPI has demonstrated its inability to do what is right by the people of New Zealand, the true owners of the resource.”
ENDS
TIMELINE OF EVENTS
May
2016
University of Auckland’s catch reconstruction report released.
New Zealand’s fishery catch of the last 50 years estimated at 2.7
times more than reported. Report attacked by industry as being
misleading.
LegaSea respond to the report calling for an
urgent review of the QMS and of MPI’s
role in overseeing the fishing industry. EDS call for a wider review of NZ’s
fisheries management system.
Government appoints Michael
Heron QC to review decision not to prosecute those filmed
dumping fish. LegaSea says the Heron review is not enough,
only a full review of the QMS will be
enough to allay public concerns about Ministry capture
by the fishing industry.
The catch reconstruction report
also refers to MPI’s own investigators’ concerns
about the level of fish dumping for the first time.
MPI awards contract to place cameras on
boats to monitor for illegal fish dumping and under reported
catch of protected species to Trident, a company
wholly-owned by the fishing industry.
LegaSea questions who is running New
Zealand’s fisheries and urges the Minister to
establish an independent inquiry with broad terms of
reference.
September
2016
Heron report reveals MPI decision not to prosecute was
“flawed”, recommends changes to the way MPI reacts
in future. The report also shows MPI were fearful of the reaction by the
public and the commercial fishers themselves if they did
prosecute.
The report also reveals senior MPI managers
believe dumping of fish is so widespread half
the inshore trawl fleet would go out of business if the law
was enforced.
November
2016
MPI forced to admit that up to 80 percent of the cameras installed on
snapper trawlers to police fish dumping failed during their
first three months of use. Footage from some vessels has
been missing for up to a month.
December 2016
MPI forced to
reveal that only four cases of fish dumping have
been brought before the courts since 2009.
April 2017
University of
Auckland researchers reveal MPI refuses to release information
relating to 14 more operations that detail the Ministry’s
investigations into reporting and fish dumping.
MPI’s
relationship with industry questioned further after it is
revealed MPI has outsourced administration and data
management for large parts of its daily activity to a
company wholly-owned by the fishing industry.
The
Ombudsman’s Office has forced MPI to reveal that the legal
advice it relied on to avoid prosecuting those industrial
fishers filmed dumping fish doesn’t exist and never
had.