“Instead of paying their fines, the vessels fled the country” Fisheries Minister Emma Kowa.
Sierra Leone has alerted other countries in the region after three foreign trawlers escaped detention in the Freetown port. The Jian Mei 1, Jian Mei 4 and Hong Chang 1 had been sanctioned for violating national laws and regulations.
Instead of paying their fines, the vessels fled the country. A regional search has been launched to locate the fugitive vessels and return them to Sierra Leone to face justice, environmental justice campaign said.
Illegal fishing is a serious issue in West Africa, with trawlers devastating marine ecosystems and undermining local, small-scale fisheries industries that are critical sources of jobs and food security in the region. In Sierra Leone, fisheries provide nine percent of the country, providing tens of thousands of jobs. These plentiful coastal waters are sadly a target for illegal foreign trawlers.
Over recent months, authorities arrested and sanctioned three trawlers—Jian Mei 1, Jian Mei 4 and Hong Chang 1. Each had been documented by local fishermen apparently operating in inshore waters where industrial fishing is banned. They were being held in Freetown port while the government awaited the payment of fines. However, on 27 July all three escaped the port without paying. Authorities say they are unaware of their location and have appealed to neighboring states to help locate and return the vessels.
The nationality of the vessel owners has not been verified, though China Dialogue Ocean estimate that 75 percent of trawlers in Sierra Leone are from China. The role of Chinese vessels in West Africa has been under increasing scrutiny in recent months, with Chinese industrial trawlers making controversial efforts to fish in Senegal, Ghana and Liberia, in the face of opposition from local fishing associations.
In letters announcing the escape, Sierra Leone’s Minister of Fisheries and Marine Resources, Emma Kowa-Jalloh, said the vessels “were under arrest for infringing the laws and regulations of Sierra Leone [and] have left the country on the 27th July 2020 illegally without fulfilling the relevant sanctions levied on them.”
This incident serves to demonstrate the need for greater transparency in global fisheries, including a mandatory global record of fishing vessels to prevent such fugitive vessels simply changing their identity and applying to fish in another country. It is critical that governments across West Africa work together to identify where the vessels have fled to and ensure their return to Sierra Leone to face justice.
Meanwhile, the Fisheries Minister said the industry has been able to raise $ 700,000 from fines generated from illegal fishing vessels this year.