November 17, 2017 โ Illegal and unregulated fishing supports transnational crime, piracy, insurgency and terrorism and should be treated as a national security issue, a new report from the National Geographic Society and the Center for Strategic and International Studies says.
Although illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing provide pathways for a host of criminal activities, โit doesnโt have the consciousness of government imaginationโ not only in the United States but globally, John Hamre, CSIS chief executive officer said on Wednesday.
Active enforcement of exclusive economic zones and protected maritime areas is โlargely the Wild Westโ in legal terms because one nationโs laws differ from another, said Gregory Poling, one of the reportโs authors. Nations have not agreed-upon definitions of what is permitted even in protected maritime areas.
Transnational criminal networks become involved through the use of large fishing vessels staying at sea for a year or more, said Daniel Myers, of the National Geographic Pristine Seas project. In reality, โYou have slave laborโ working on these ships. Often a two-step โtrans-shippingโ system is used. In the first step, the smaller boats unload illegal catches onto a large mother ship. The mother ship, in turn, refuels and resupplies the smaller fishing vessels, allowing them to remain out from port for months and keep the crews working, often against their will.
Additionally, โyou have illegal fishing boats used as cover for narco-trafficking,โ Myers said. The stomachs of illegally-captured sharks or other fish are filled with cocaine. The results are profits from the illegal catch and the drug smuggling.