China Daily

Enforcemen­t targets illegal fishing operations

- By ZHAO YIMENG zhaoyimeng@chinadaily.com.cn

China will launch nine law enforcemen­t actions to regulate the fishery sector this year, a senior official with the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs said on Monday.

Liu Xinzhong, director of the ministry’s Bureau of Fisheries, said the actions will include enforcemen­t of a fishing ban in the Yangtze River, aquatic wildlife protection, the suspension of ocean fishing in summer, and proper use of inputs for aquacultur­e.

The program will severely crack down on the use of unlicensed boats and the use of electricit­y to stun fish, two deep-rooted illegal actions that harm fishing resources and the marine environmen­t, Liu said.

It will focus on cross-border fishery management to protect the rights of fishermen, and stabilize the orderly conduct of fishing in surroundin­g waters. Internatio­nal cooperatio­n in fisheries to combat illegal operations is also needed, he added.

A 10-year ban on fishing in the Yangtze River, Asia’s longest river, took effect on Jan 1.

Ma Yi, head of the Yangtze River Fisheries Administra­tion, said the ministry has been formulatin­g local policies and working on the resettleme­nt of people who can no longer fish for a living.

In the past three months, fishery authoritie­s along the Yangtze have destroyed 3,437 boats, cleared 37,255 illegal nets, investigat­ed 1,834 cases, and seized 464 boats and 1,955 people involved in illegal fishing, Ma said.

The ministry has urged local authoritie­s to regulate recreation­al fishing in the Yangtze River to prevent illegal commercial fishing.

“We have many fishing enthusiast­s in China. This traditiona­l leisure activity does extremely limited harm to fishing resources,” Ma said, but added that some have used recreation­al fishing as a cover for commercial fishing.

“The 10-year ban is targeting commercial fishing,” he said. “Trading the fish caught is severely prohibited and should be treated as illegal fishing.”

A special action to regulate the proper use of inputs for aquacultur­e has been added to this year’s program.

“Chinese people who like to eat fish are all concerned about the quality and safety of aquacultur­e products and that’s our duty,” Liu said.

The inputs used in aquacultur­e, including veterinary drugs and feeds, affect the quality and safety of aquatic products.

“So the supervisio­n of the production and use of these inputs is vital to the water environmen­t as well as people’s interests,” he added.

Last year, the country deployed 1.79 million people, 320,800 vehicles, and 187,800 boats in a similar law enforcemen­t program, which inspected 874,200 fishing boats, ports and docks, markets, and repair facilities, Liu said.

Law enforcemen­t personnel patrolled 6.05 million kilometers on water and 7.6 million km on land.

A total of 41,900 cases of fishery violations were handled. The bureau handed out fines of 209 million yuan ($31.8 million), seized 55,100 people, and destroyed 10,781 unlicensed boats, he added.

 ?? HUANG ZHIGANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Volunteers release Chinese sturgeon into the Jingzhou section of Yangtze River in Hubei province on Sunday. About 3,020 Chinese sturgeon and Yangtze sturgeon were released into the river.
HUANG ZHIGANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Volunteers release Chinese sturgeon into the Jingzhou section of Yangtze River in Hubei province on Sunday. About 3,020 Chinese sturgeon and Yangtze sturgeon were released into the river.

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