Organized crime in the fisheries sector threatens a sustainable ocean economy 
By Emma Witbooi, Kamal-Deen Ali US Source: nature 11/11/2020

The threat of criminal activity in the fisheries sector has concerned the international community for a number of years. In more recent times, the presence of organized crime in fisheries has come to the fore. In 2008, the United Nations General Assembly asked all states to contribute to increasing our understanding the connection between illegal fishing and transnational organized crime at sea.
 

Policy-makers, researchers and members of civil society are increasing their knowledge of the dynamics and destructiveness of the blue shadow economy and the role of organized crime within this economy. Anecdotal, scientific and example-based evidence of the various manifestations of organized crime in fisheries, its widespread adverse impacts on economies, societies and the environment globally and its potential security consequences is now publicly available. Here we present the current state of knowledge on organized crime in the fisheries sector. We show how the many facets of organized crime in this sector, including fraud, drug trafficking and forced labour, hinder progress towards the development of a sustainable ocean economy. With reference to worldwide promising practices, we highlight practical opportunities for action to address the problem. We emphasize the need for a shared understanding of the challenge and for the implementation of intelligence-led, skills-based cooperative law enforcement action at a global level and a community-based approach for targeting organized crime in the supply chain of organized criminal networks at a local level, facilitated by legislative frameworks and increased transparency.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
2926Fisherman catches ‘rare and endangered’ 50-pound fish in Missourimytwintiers2022-04-26US
2927Hawai’i nears legal prohibition of drones for fishingdronedj2022-04-27US
2928Father and son catch huge buffalo fish in Shelby Park lakeNashville Tennessean2022-04-27US
2929Invasive, parasite-carrying fish found in Northern New Yorknews102022-04-28US
2930Fish on drugs: cocktail of medications is ‘contaminating ocean food chain’theguardian2022-04-29UK
2931East Texas 16-year-old sets fishing world recordkrqe2022-04-29US
2932Lack of fairness prompts Federal Court to set aside B.C.nsnews2022-04-26CA
2933How many fish in the seetheindependent2022-04-29CA
2934Angler catches massive paddlefish in TennesseeFox News2022-04-20US
2935Missouri fisherman catches 50-pound rare sturgeonFox News2022-04-25US
2936Massive 832-pound bluefin tuna caught off Florida coastFox News2022-04-29US
2937Texas man catches 9.5-foot tiger shark with the help of a droneFox News2022-05-04US
2938Angler reels in massive 'fish of a lifetime,' sets new state recordFox News2022-04-12US
2939Российские рыбаки продолжают стабильно вести промысел: добыто более 1,7 млн тонн водных биоресурсовkorabel2022-05-06RU
2940Власти Камчатки огласили разрешенный объем вылова лососей в 2022 годуkorabel2022-04-29RU
2941Autonomous robotic rover helps scientists with long-term monitoring of deep-sea carbon cycle and climate changembari2021-11-03US
2942New footage shows bizarre deep-sea fish that sees through its foreheadlivescience2021-12-13US
2943Monitoring river health using a robotic water samplerMBARI2020-09-21US
2944Elusive bronze-scaled ‘dragon’ of the deep caught on video off California coastLive Science2022-05-05US
2945Another big Maritime fishery quota cut loomingCBC News2022-05-06CA
2946Ontario's feral goldfish population is exploding and climate change may be to blameCBC News2022-05-02CA
2947Twelwe Pound Burbot Breaks New Hampshire State Recordfishncanada2022-02-18CA
294851-Pound Muskie Shatters State Recordfishncanada2022-03-15US
2949Lack of fairness prompts Federal Court to set aside B.C. fish farm phaseoutglobalnews2022-04-27CA
295015 Types of Koi for Your PondHappyDIYHome2022-03-27NZ

215 216 217 117 of [218 - pages.]