Oroville Mercury-Register

Corruption endangers world’s shrinking fisheries

- By Fu Ting, Grace Ekpu and Helen Wieffering

As Indonesia’s fisheries minister, Edhy Prabowo was tasked with protecting one of his country’s most precious resources: baby lobsters so tiny one can fit on the tip of a finger.

The waters off the nation’s many islands and archipelag­os had once teemed with lobster. But overfishin­g in recent decades decimated the crustacean’s population, so much so that fishermen turned to catching the hatchlings. They scooped them up by the thousands and shipped them to Vietnamese lobster farms, where the babies are raised to adulthood and sold mostly to dealers in China to meet its enormous demand for seafood.

Concerned that such harvesting was harming lobster population­s, Indonesia’s fishing ministry in 2016 prohibited the export of the tiny crustacean­s. Shortly after taking office, Prabowo lifted the ban. Court documents show that just a month later, in June 2020, the minister accepted a $77,000 bribe from a seafood supplier to grant it a permit to sell the hatchlings abroad.

The money kept flowing. In his short stint as minister, Prabowo accepted bribes of nearly $2 million. He was arrested in 2020 by Indonesian authoritie­s, having used the graft to purchase 26 road bikes, Old Navy children’s clothes, Louis Vuitton bags, Rolex watches and two luxury pens. Prabowo, 50, was sentenced to five years in prison for corruption. His attorney declined to comment.

Prabowo’s case is not an outlier. At least 45 government officials have been accused of corruption in the past two decades, the AP found. The allegation­s range from high-ranking officials like Prabowo, accepting large payments from fishing companies to obtain lucrative contracts, to low-level civil servants accepting a few thousand dollars to ignore fishermen bringing illegal catch ashore.

“Fisheries corruption can have devastatin­g impacts on marine ecosystems and local communitie­s that may depend on them,” said Ben Freitas, manager of ocean policy at the World Wildlife Fund, based in Washington. “It is a global problem.”

The situation is most critical in areas managed by developing nations because many industrial­ized countries have already overfished their own waters, forcing their trawlers to go afar. Many coastal developing countries depend on fish for millions of jobs and to feed their people.

Those wishing to conceal their operations or pay bribes to get around restrictio­ns have found fishing to be a welcoming industry.

“The lack of accountabi­lity, I think, is even greater in the fisheries sector than it is in other environmen­tal-related activities,” said Juhani Grossmann at the Basel Institute on Governance, which is working on anti-corruption efforts with Indonesia’s fishing ministry.

At least with illicit lumber operations, Grossmann said, “you don’t have a different shell corporatio­n for every single truck.”

The AP review found that most cases of corruption and graft were lowlevel schemes, like one in India in which prosecutor­s last year alleged two fisheries officers extorted $1,100 to approve subsidies for a fish farm. Another involved fishermen said to have bribed Malaysian officers with at least $11,000 for every boat they agreed not to report.

But some involve global financial institutio­ns. In 2021, the Swiss bank Credit Suisse admitted to fraudulent­ly financing a massive loan to Mozambique to expand its tuna fishing fleet. A contractor handling the loan paid kickbacks of $150 million to Mozambican government officials.

And in the “Fishrot “scandal, Namibian authoritie­s allege the Icelandic seafood company Samherji paid roughly $6 million in bribes to Namibian officials to be permitted to fish in the country’s waters. Samherji has denied committing crimes.

Stephen Akester, a fisheries management adviser who has worked in Africa and South Asia for four decades, cited a long history of foreign companies — particular­ly from China — forging corrupt relationsh­ips with fisheries officials.

“They exploited the weakness of these government­s for whom any kind of revenue was big money, even small dollars,” he said. “And that still continues today.”

In Gambia, a small West African nation nestled along Senegal’s coast, the permanent secretary of the Ministry of Fisheries and Water Resources, Bamba Banja, was charged in 2021 with accepting a bribe from a Chinese company to free a vessel detained for illegal fishing. The case is ongoing; Banja’s lawyer told AP that the fisheries secretary denies any wrongdoing.

Corruption is not limited to developing countries. Malta’s fisheries director in 2019 was linked to a criminal network that sought to launder illegally caught bluefin tuna that arrived in Spain from Italy and Malta via French ports. The newspaper El Confidenci­al said Spanish police intercepte­d a phone call in which the director was heard telling a tuna magnate, “You have to pay me.” Malta’s fisheries ministry said the director was on unpaid leave.

The cases reviewed by AP probably represent a small fraction of the corruption that takes place daily as seafood is transporte­d and sold around the world.

In Ghana, for instance, the fishing ministry has been unmarked by any major corruption scandal. Yet the Environmen­tal Justice Foundation, which has investigat­ed abuses in the fishing sector for two decades, issued a report last year documentin­g how the West African nation has become ensnared in “a culture of corruption in which bribery and intimidati­on pervades all levels of fisheries management.”

Kyei Kwadwo Yamoah advocates for better fisheries management in Ghana as convener of the Fisheries Alliance. In reviewing infraction­s reported by observers on fishing vessels for a World Bank project in 2016, Yamoah found wide, unexplaine­d gaps in enforcemen­t. The government had penalized some companies, he said, but others were granted a renewed fishing license without question.

“There was no clarity as to why these vessels were not even booked or sanctioned, while there was a clear case of a breach of law,” Yamoah said.

Overfishin­g and illegal fishing have pushed Ghana’s fish stocks to near collapse, prompting presidenti­al action and putting the livelihood­s and the health of millions of Ghanaians at risk.

The situation, Yamoah said, is growing dire: Some days fishermen spend all day on the water and come back with nothing.

 ?? ACHMAD IBRAHIM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Fishermen remove their catch from nets after returning to shore in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Feb. 24, 2022.
ACHMAD IBRAHIM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Fishermen remove their catch from nets after returning to shore in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Feb. 24, 2022.
 ?? SUNDAY ALAMBA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Fishermen sort their early morning catch from nets, at the fishing beach in the James Town area of Accra, Ghana, July 9, 2015.
SUNDAY ALAMBA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Fishermen sort their early morning catch from nets, at the fishing beach in the James Town area of Accra, Ghana, July 9, 2015.

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