April 2, 2004
Drama on the high seas
BY: sandy
Who said fishing was tame? The last month has seen a spate of news articles about pirate fishing – illegal fishing by boats that flout national and international law. Most recently, South Africa’s Independent Online reported the dramatic seizure of two boats fishing illegally off Mozambique:
In scenes reminiscent of a rip-roaring pirate movie, armed South African fishing inspectors hurled stun grenades at two “pirate” fishing ships and seized them after boarding them spectacularly in the Mozambique channel.
[…]
The fish pirates from the Far East were using “wall of death” gill-nets off the coast of Mozambique on March 11 and 12.
The high seas adventure resulted in the impounding of the Indonesian-registered Sin Iu Peng and the Chinese-registered Nong Jyl Lih, the arrest of 42 crewmen drawn from a variety of Asian countries and the confiscation of fish valued at about R2-million.
Allafrica.com reports that the boats, which were licensed to fish for tuna, had actually stuffed their holds with 70 tons of shark fins. Apparently Mozambiquan fishermen have been complaining for a while that foreign, illegal fishing ships were plundering their waters. Seems they know what they’re talking about.
On other continents, meanwhile, “the captain and senior crew of the alleged toothfish pirate vessel Viarsa 1, captured after the longest chase in Australian maritime history, have denied charges of illegal fishing” (from Australian news site News.com.au). And the BBC relays a claim by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) that pirate fishing is driving the albatross to extinction.