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NO MORE FISHY
PLAN OF ACTION |
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GREENPEACE MEDIA RELEASE
Suva, Fiji Islands. Monday October 9, 2006. The Pacific Island Governments have been encouraged by Greenpeace to
develop a national plan of action that implements the latest international
laws against pirate fishing to stop foreign vessels fishing illegally in their
Economic Exclusive Zone (EEZ).
Greenpeace Australia Pacific Oceans Teams leader Nilesh Goundar said pirate
fishers were becoming courageous by the day as last week saw a American pirate
vessel fined by the Cook Islands High Court(1) and a suspected pirate vessel
fleeing from Kiribati officials in a joint surveillance exercise with
Greenpeace(2).
“This tells us the Pacific people are having their fish stolen from their
plates as it is a major source of protein and an economic resource in most
Pacific Island countries,” he said.
“Even where foreign fishing fleets pay in return for access to a Pacific
country’s fishing grounds. The financial returns from these access fees and
licenses are worth a pittance of the total value of fish caught often a mere 5
per cent of the US $2billion that the fish is worth when it reaches the
international market,” he said.
Mr Goundar said Pacific Islands Governments must be united and stand firm in
fisheries conservation and management.
“The Pacific Island Governments must not allow foreign industrial fishing
nations to hoodwink them, into accepting unfair fisheries partnership
agreements,” he said.
Greenpeace is currently on a Defending Our Oceans (DOO) expedition in the
Pacific highlighting the beauty of and the environmental threats to the
world's oceans. 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(3).
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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