Caught red-handed: Greenpeace calls for arrest of illegal Japanese fishing ship

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mikeg Just the other day, I was having a discussion with Karli, one of our onboard Oceans campaigners, about the origin of the phrase “caught red-handed.” One website I found said that it came about as a reference to literally being caught with blood on your hands after the commission of a murder or a poaching session.
 
Whether or not that’s the true origin of the phrase, it makes an apt introduction to what we witnessed yesterday. We literally caught the Japanese ship Koyu Maru 3 red-handed, hauling in its long-line and catching tuna within Cook Islands waters, where the ship does not have a license to fish.

Koyu Maru 3 copyright Paul Hilton/Greenpeace
The Koyu Maru 3 in Cook Islands waters. Image © Paul Hilton/Greenpace

We provided the Cook Islands Ministry of Marine Resources and the Fisheries Agency of Japan with photographic evidence of the illegal activity, which you can see here, and are now calling for the arrest of the ship’s captain.

Koyu Maru 3 and crew
The crew of the Koyu Maru 3 hauling in their long-line. Image © Paul Hilton/Greenpace

Koyu Maru 3 hauls in a tuna copyright Paul Hilton/Greenpeace
The crew of the Koyu Maru hauling a tuna onto their ship. Image © Paul Hilton/Greenpace

Greenpeace is also demanding that the Japanese government order Koyu Maru 3, which is owned by Tokyo-based World Tuna Co Ltd., to stop its illegal fishing activities and sail to the nearest port for further investigation.

This is more than an issue of what’s legal and illegal. The Koyu Maru 3 and other pirate fishing vessels are stealing fish from these waters and using it for their own profit, depriving the people of the Cook Islands of a vital source of income. Josh, another Oceans campaigner onboard who is from the region, put it well when he said, “These pirates of the Pacific must be stopped from plundering ocean life and robbing local communities.”

With that in mind, we decided that documenting the plundering of their seas and providing that evidence to Cook Islands officials, and thereby helping empower them to police their own waters, would be more effective than taking action against the vessel ourselves.

Globally, more than $9 billion dollars is lost each year to pirate fishing fleets, who reap their profits in European, American and Asian markets while threatening Pacific fish stocks and depriving coastal communities of much-needed income. A recent report estimated that pirate fishing in the Pacific accounts for an average of 36% of the fish caught there, much higher than the global average of 19%.

Long-liners like the Koyu Maru 3 mainly target bigeye, yellowfin and albacore tuna, as these species fetch top dollar in sashimi markets in Japan and other countries where this delicacy has become popular. Scientists have warned, however, that some Pacific tuna stocks, particularly bigeye and yellowfin tuna, are being fished beyond their limits. Pirate fishing further threatens the stocks and undermines conservation and management attempts in the region. That’s why it’s important that local Pacific islands governments have the resources they need to protect their waters.

Comments (5)

  • michellefrey
    Permalink michellefrey on October 09, 2009
    Amazing photos!
  • Permalink Chase on October 09, 2009
    WHY WHY WHY is it that the Japanese are so errogant to think they can rape the seas?!. Is this poaching off the cook islands considered 'research' like their whaling enterprise in the whale 'sancturary' of the antarctic?!!? the world economies need to stand up against Japan and their blaintent disrespect for the seas.
  • Permalink billieee on October 10, 2009
    I'm not a die hard environmentalist but I'd like to put my 2 cent in =) yes, there is a problem w/ poaching/ flagging/ fishing count/ pirate fishing...instead of whinning about it, ratting...out pirate fishing....we need a better plan, intiative to fix the problem so that there is equality of opportunity for all...how we can solve this problem...we need a better system of control and access to the sea....yes it's wrong that these pirate ships r stealing and pillaring the sea world...that's what they do...so, there's got to be a better way of managing the sea operation. inventors/entrepreneurs r busy brainstorming this problem, as we speak...we're seeing it thru the turbine wind pwr and fish farming...so, we're definitely concern and doing about it =) on a good note =)
  • Permalink billieee on October 10, 2009
    yes., pirate fishing is a problem...instead of whinning about it and ratting out pirate fishing we must turn to innovation to fix the problem. we're seeing it thru turbine wind and farm fishing...any other bright ideas?
  • mikeg
    Permalink mikeg on October 10, 2009
    thanks for your two comments, billieee.

    but you are drastically mis-characterizing our efforts when you say we are "whinning [sic] about it and ratting out pirate fishing." ships like the Koyu Maru 3 are literally stealing fish from Pacific islanders. in many cases, the people from these Pacific island nations have lived off of these waters for thousands of years, and their way of life is threatened by the depletion of Pacific fisheries -- yet, unconscionably, pirate fishermen like these ones from Japan are brazenly flouting the law and all sense of moral decency just to make a buck.

    empowering local Pacific islands governments to better police their waters -- it is a big ocean, after all, and very hard to patrol -- is therefore very good work, in my opinion. the Cook Islands gov't has been able to use our evidence to formally start legal proceedings against the ship and request that the Japanese gov't take action against the Koyu Maru 3. the end of this process, hopefully, will be that the vessel is called back to port in Japan for further investigation, meaning one less pirate fishing vessel on the seas. and each vessel can catch hundreds of tons of tuna at a time, and who knows how much more when they engage in trans-shipping. and that's saying nothing of the many other species being killed as bycatch. so it's really no small victory to take a pirate fishing vessel off the seas.

    in the absence of this nebulous "innovation" you speak of, i think this is a damn fine way to try and stop pirate fishing. of course, we're also working on many other levels, politically speaking, to end the problem.

    if your intent was really to start a discussion about ways to stop pirate fishing, maybe you could skip the whole casting aspersions bit and just get right on with the real conversation, in the future.
  •  

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