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ACTIVISTS onboard the Greenpeace vessel, Arctic Sunrise, have said they confronted Italian fishing “pirates” in the Mediterranean Sea and confiscated almost two kilometers of illegal driftnet containing dead undersized bluefin tunas and a small sea turtle, that was later released alive.
The Arctic Sunrise crew said it came across the Italian fishing vessel Diomede II, fishing with 8 – 10 kilometers of driftnet in international waters approximately fifty kilometers from the coast of Sicily, Italy.
The crew had reportedly covered the vessel’s name and registration number to avoid being identified.
Diomede II is licensed only to fish with longline or anchored nets, and only within fifteen kilometers of the coast. The Arctic Sunrise is now following Diomede II towards its home harbour, and Greenpeace has requested that the coastguard confiscate the illegal driftnet and catch.
"Driftnets are huge floating nets that act as ‘walls of death’ for fish and other sea life," says Greenpeace.
They were banned by the United Nations and the European Union because they were said to have indiscriminately trapped and killed thousands of whales, dolphins and turtles in the Mediterranean each year.
Despite the bans, says Greenpeace, driftnet fleets from Italy and other Mediterranean countries are still fishing – Italian authorities continue to confiscate hundreds of kilometers of driftnet each year.
“Bans are useless if they are not enforced,” said Alessandro Gianni of Greenpeace Italy.
“Italian and EU authorities must end this shameful practice and adopt strong European Union laws to ban pirate fishing vessels from access to European ports and funds.
"It is a scandal that Greenpeace is still finding newly built vessels fishing with driftnets, known to indiscriminately trap and kill protected species, more than a decade after driftnets were banned.”
The European Commission has proposed new laws that would blacklist fishing vessels involved in illegal practices. But Italy and other member states are said to be seeking to water down those laws.
Greenpeace launched a campaign in 2006 calling for the creation a network of marine reserves for the Mediterranean Sea. This network is vital, says Greenpeace, to ensure that fish stocks recover and the fishing industry has a sustainable future.
Stocks of large predators such as tuna and swordfish, targeted by driftnets, are in peril globally, and are estimated to be reduced by 80%.
A network of marine reserves and the end of fishing piracy are two basic ingredients for the recovery of the Mediterranean Sea, and are in the best interests of the honest fisherman, according to the conservation group.
“Failure to set-up a network of marine reserves will spell disaster for conservation, disaster for fish stocks and disaster for the long term economic interest of fishermen. If we want fish tomorrow, we need marine reserves today,” concluded Gianni.
Greenpeace is campaigning for a global network of fully protected marine reserves covering 40% of our oceans as an essential way to protect our seas from the ravages of climate change, to restore the health of fish stocks, and protect ocean life from habitat destruction and collapse.
As part of this campaign, the Arctic Sunrise is currently in the Mediterranean documenting threats to the sea and promoting the designation of marine reserves.
Greenpeace is an independent campaigning organisation that uses non-violent creative confrontation to expose global environmental problems to drive solutions that are essential to a green and peaceful future.
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