Issue 383
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Front
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News Headlines
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Local
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Editorial |
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Editor's Choice |
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Features
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International News
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Opinion |
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By
Amiin Dahir, Columbus, Oh
The primary issue in the development of the sea and fisheries sector in
Somaliland is the irresponsible fishing practices known internationally
as illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing.. These have become
a direct threat to the efforts to responsibly manage Somaliland’s fish
resources and are an impediment to achieving sustainable fishing.
Illegal fishing in Somaliland is generally done by fishing boats that
operate without a fishing operations permit (SFP) or fishing permit
document.
These boats are surely not going to report their catch, nor pay the
taxes they owe to the government. There are also boats that hold the
right permits but do not abide by the stated regulations, which include
using permitted fishing equipment, fishing trails, gross tonnage
measurements and boats. This is not to mention the use of illegal and
dangerous substances and equipment.
Then there is unreported fishing, that is when fishermen do not report
their catch or production appropriately, or at all.
The unreported selling of fish in mid-sea falls under this category.
Meanwhile, the term unregulated fishing still does not have a legal
definition. There should be a set of references and supporting tools
that can quickly and properly help determine whether there were any
violations in certain suspicious fishing activities. On the other hand,
practitioners need references that can be understood by law enforcement
in the same way they do.
A lot of fishing areas in Somaliland are considered “open access”, which
means anybody can freely and easily exploit resources without an
obligation to follow or comply with certain regulations. The open
exploitation of fish gives a chance to local and foreign fishermen to
exploit resources without having to consider sustainability. Managing
the utilization of fish resources at the international and national
level, including provincial and district regulations, have not been
appropriately executed by law makers or business practitioners.
For this reason, a fish resource management policy that is appropriate
for Somaliland needs to be established and enforced by the relevant
institutions. Moreover, a greater effort is needed to overcome
irresponsible fishing. Any one who check our sea activity can found
several weaknesses in the handling of SFP fishing activities, including
the following:
A very limited amount of government employees are investigating the
fishing industry. The Berbera, Sea area, for example, has only 0 fishery
and sea regional office investigators. That amount is too low given the
size of the surrounding Somaliland Sea and allows for many problems.
This is especially true in several Somaliland regencies where there are
no investigators at all.
Fishing boats are largely unavailable. Fishing boats for monitoring are
urgently needed to support and improve the monitoring activities of fish
resources, and this is urgent because of the frequency of fishing
related crimes that take place at sea. Most fishery and regional sea
offices only have speedboats available to monitor the surrounding
coastal waters and are thus unable to explore deeper waters.
Coordination systems are weak. Institutions that coordinate with one
another include the fishery and sea regional offices, the Somaliland
Navy, immigration and the Sea Police. Unfortunately these meetings are
not routinely held and only happen incidentally when problems arise,
meaning a lot of crimes at sea go unnoticed.
There is a lack of monitoring
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