Pirate Vessel In Port Of Suva
GREENPEACE MEDIA RELEASE
Pirate Vessel In Port Of Suva
SUVA, FIJI ISLANDS. OCTOBER 18, 2006 The Wen Teng No 688 a pirate vessel black-listed under the Inter American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATCC) (1)is in the port of Suva said Greenpeace Australia Pacific Oceans Team Leader Nilesh Goundar.
She has been listed by the IATCC since June 2005 at their annual meeting in Lanzarotte Spain listed as carrying out pirate activites in the Eastern Pacific Ocean.
Mr Goundar said Josua Turaganivalu of Greenpeace, on October 12, 2006 photographed(2) it as Mahkoia Abadi and upon closer inspection saw that it was the Weng Teng No 688.
Four days later Mr Turaganivalu while on port watch saw crew members scraping and painting another name on it.
Beside the suspected pirate vessel is another vessel identified by its call-sign BJ4655 which is not registered under the Forum Fisheries Agency registry(3) and belongs to the same company.
Mr Goundar said they alerted respective
authorities this afternoon.
“It is public knowledge the
key threat to sustainability of fish stocks is compounded by
pirate or IUU (Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported
fishing),” he said
Mr Goundar called on authorities to
investigate why such vessels are here and what they are
doing.
“If they are deemed to be pirate vessels they
should be arrested, prosecuted, black-listed regionally and
internationally and all their sister ships investigated,”
he said.
Despite right aspirations Mr Goundar said the
political will of Pacific peoples and governments to
strengthen Monitoring Controlling Surveillance (MCS)
(4)systems, Pacific Islands have the stark realities of poor
infrastructure, lack of capacity, limited, over-stretched
resources and competing development priorities to deal with
and balance.
“The fact that pirate operations are vague, secretive, thrive on loopholes making them hard to detect makes monitoring, compliance and surveillance even more difficult,” he said.
Greenpeace has recently launched a science report(5) highlighting the conservation and management of Bigeye and Yellowfin tuna which is now in a critically overfished state in the Pacific.
Therefore, Mr Goundar said it was prudent the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPCF)(6) collaborate with other Regional Fisheries Management Organisation’s (RFMO’s), the MCS network, NGO’s, other organisations to strengthen, harmonise surveillance systems across the region and work towards eradicating pirate fishing totally.
Mr Goundar
said it was time flag states make greater efforts to deter
and prevent pirate fishing on high seas registered to their
flag.
“The Flag of Convenience (FOC)(7) system is very
inexpensive and often a deliberate means for fishing vessels
on the high seas to evade the rules and make enormous
profits,” he said.
“The oceans are being plundered and
we must defend it to the hilt” said Mr
Goundar.
Greenpeace is on a Defending Our Oceans (DOO)
(8)expedition in the Pacific exposing the scale and threats
of overfishing and pirate fishing in the region. Greenpeace
is campaigning for a global network of marine reserves
covering 40 % of the world's oceans. The tour is part of
Greenpeace’s 15-month global DOO expedition.
Greenpeace is an independent, campaigning organisation, which uses non-violent, creative confrontation to expose global environmental problems and to force solutions essential to a green and peaceful future.
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