Feature story - April 18, 2006
After a chase of over 1000 miles, a six day occupation and hours of diplomatic negotiations, Spain has finally agreed to declare the cargo from the "Binar 4'" - 200 tonnes of fish stolen from West Africa - illegal. Guinean officials also announced they would be fining the owners and operators of the pirate vessel.
The last Greenpeace activists occupying the Pirate fishing vessel "Binar 4" in Las Palmas climb down after Spain agrees to declare the 200 tonnes of stolen fish onboard illegal.
After
branding the ship with "stolen fish", Greenpeace climbers
havecontinuously occupied the "Binar 4" in the notorious pirate
fishingport of Las Palmas for nearly 150 hours. When the
announcement was madethe last two activists descended to cheers
from the gathered crowd,tired but still smiling.
During the time the Esperanza was patrolling the waters of West
Africa,104 foreign flagged vessels, from Korea, China, Italy,
Liberia andBelize were documented. Nearly half were engaged in or
linked toillegal fishing activities.
The "Binar 4" was taking fish from shipslicensed to fish, but
all the vessels involved had broken the lawsconcerning
transshipments.
"In every ocean, every day fish are being stolen. That means
that allgovernments must act every day to combat it," said Sarah
Duthie ofGreenpeace. "We are delighted that the authorities have
taken actionagainst this illegal reefer, but this can only be the
beginning, notthe end. If Greenpeace and the Environmental Justice
Foundation had notacted then Spain would not have done anything to
stop this cargo beingsold across Europe."
"Fining the Binar 4 sends a strong signal to other pirate
operators,but it is only a fraction of the humanitarian and
environmental cost,"said Helene Bours of the Environmental Justice
Foundation. "West Africadepends on fish for food and income, but it
is the only regional in theworld where consumption is falling."
According to the High Seas Task Force on Illegal, Unreported
&Unregulated (IUU or pirate) fishing, up to 20% of the global
catch istaken illegally - as much as US$9 billion dollars.
Greenpeace and theEnvironmental Justice Foundation are working
together to expose thepirate fishing fleets that operate without
sanction across the globe.Together they are demanding that
governments close ports to banpirates, deny them access to markets
and prosecute companies supportingthem.
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