Seized shark fins dumped in Pacific ceremony
Illustration: Confiscated shark fins were symbolically disposed of at
sea in a ceremony witnessed by regional leaders.
The
The gesture underscored the progress made towards protecting the
marine predators since the
Villagomez said some commercial tuna fishermen still illegally
cut the fins from sharks, even though they earned very little from the
practice.
"Fishermen only receive a few dollars (per fin)," he
said. "But once they are processed in
The fins that were dumped off the capital Majuro were
confiscated from a Chinese longline fishing vessel earlier this year that was
fined $125,000.
The Pew group estimates more than 70 million sharks are killed
annually for their fins, leaving up to a third of open-water species on the
brink of extinction.
Villagomez said the fins disposed of on Tuesday included ones
from oceanic whitetip sharks, which are "protected in every tuna fishery
and is the most vulnerable species of shark".
In the north Pacific, the Marshall Islands, Palau, Guam, Northern
Marianas and three of the four states of the Federated States of Micronesia
ban shark finning.
"The Pacific is leading the world in shark
protection," Villagomez said.
The PIF officially opens on Tuesday evening with a lavish
ceremony on the shores of Majuro's lagoon.
Source: AFP
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Thứ Hai, 2 tháng 9, 2013
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