More Top Stories

Court
Education
Editor's Pick

TB cases detected

1 June 2024

Sports
Court

Alleged rapist in remand

27 April 2024

National
Rugby league

Moana target 2025 World Cup

11 November 2022

Illegal seafood harvesting operation busted

Wednesday 23 March 2016 | Published in Regional

Share

SAMOA – A Samoa law enforcement operation coordinated by Department of Fisheries officials have pulled off one of the largest successful raids of illegally harvested fish products in the history of the country.

It netted dried sea cucumber of the highest grade with an estimated market value as high as US$360,000.

A Chinese man caught in the raid has been charged with breaching Samoa’s Fisheries Act 1988.

Codenamed ‘Rico’, the one week long operation, confiscasted 431 kilograms of the prime sea cucumber species (Holothuria scabra) at two locations in the capital city of Apia.

More commonly known as sandfish the species can fetch up US$840 per kilogram on the international market

Samoa’s Chief Fisheries Officer Yohni Fepulea’i said the dollar value of the haul was significant when taking into account the minimum wage in Samoa is the tala equivalent of US$0.90 per hour.

“Operation Rico involved extensive planning and the successful outcome relied heavily on the cooperation and collaboration between our Fisheries Enforcement Unit and our counterparts at the Police Maritime unit,” Fepulea’i revealed while representing Samoa at the annual Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) Monitoring, Control and Surveillance Working Group meeting in Auckland.

“Without a doubt this is the highlight in the 2016 year already for our enforcement unit, bringing these people who are illegally processing and exporting our valuable resources overseas. Resources that our government and people depend on.”

According to Fepulea’i, Fisheries and Maritime police officers executed raids on two separate locations on February 2.

“The defendant was found operating a fish processing plant for sea cucumber fishery. The investigation sighted processed sea cucumber in both locations.

The 431kg haul was a mixture of echinoderms with the dominant species (80 per cent) the prized sandfish species.

Fepulea’i also confirmed that investigations into other suspects involved in illegal operations were ongoing.

He said the other successful outcome of Operation Rico was highlighting the increasing and important role fisheries officials are now playing as part of Samoa’s wider law enforcement sector.

“It’s a fact that not many people know about our role as such, but for us it’s a very crucial role to raise awareness of the police sector overall that hopefully will deter criminals or have more sources come forward with information that would lead to more investigations.

“For our part, we want to promote the message that a Fisheries Act exists. That we are implementing the monitoring, control and enforcement of the Act’s provisions so that fishers and operators at the national level would opt for voluntary compliance under the Act rather than be tempted to go the other way.”

Although many of Samoa’s public are not aware of fisheries policing and enforcement role, the unit is growing to become a critical part of the enforcement sector as regional and international fishing networks forge closer links to reduce illegal fishing around the world.

In that combined network, they are also bringing in information that helps with investigations into other issues such as the illegal trade in drugs and human trafficking.

“Our fisheries unit may be small and under resourced, as is the case with many small developing nations, compared to the bigger nations in our region and internationally, but we have grown in capability and expertise compared to our efforts and coverage in the past in terms of our obligations at the national level.

“And the success of Operation ‘Rico is testament we have improved and it has not come about by accident.

“We have taken on board the lessons learnt and innovations by our more experienced members in the Pacific and global regions, assistance from the Forum Fisheries Agency and efforts by New Zealand and Australia in terms of assisting small island states like Samoa plug gaps and develop key skills needed in monitoring, control and surveillance of our national waters.”

At the end of the day, Samoa does not have the human and financial resources to fully manage its coastal and offshore fishery as well as play its part in regional efforts against Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated fishing, Fepulea’i said.

But what it can do to buffer the shortfall is develop and maximise interagency cooperation and information sharing at the national and regional level.

The message to people involved in illegal fishing activities or thinking about getting into illegal activities in Samoa,

“We are watching. With our enforcement counterparts we are growing our net to enforce the fisheries act. Let’s work together, you do voluntary compliance, and we make sure the level playing field stipulated by the Fisheries Act gives everyone fair game.”

- Samoa Observer