Fishing Industry Will Continue To Kill Dolphins Under New Rules – SAFE

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New measures announced yesterday by Conservation Minister Eugenie Sage and Fisheries Minister Stuart Nash will not bring the critically endangered Māui dolphin back from the brink, according to animal rights organisation SAFE.

SAFE Campaigns Director Ilan Goldberg said the measures do not go far enough.

“The silent killer here is the very same one that’s haunting our endangered albatross – bycatch taken by our fishing vessels, which is not independently monitored.”

“The fishing industry won’t be held to account without enforceable rules and cameras on fishing vessels. Currently, what happens at sea, stays at sea.”

Goldberg says the Government must establish a separate crown entity that is independent of the fishing industry. It should have the mandate to protect threatened marine and bird life such as the Māui dolphin.

The new measures in New Zealand follow court action launched by Sea Shepherd in the United States which call for an import ban on New Zealand seafood caught in the endangered dolphin’s habitat. The complainants say New Zealand’s protection laws for marine mammals are far less stringent than those in the US.

There are only around 63 Māui dolphins and about 15,000 Hector’s dolphins remaining in the world. The Māui dolphin is the world’s smallest and rarest dolphin. They are classified by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as critically endangered.

3 COMMENTS

  1. With our long-sustained myth that we humans are at the top of the “pyramid”, fish of any kind (& dolphins are MAMMALS – as we humans are) – but nothing counts like money does. IMO, nothing positive/beautiful will come about. If only (collectively) we realised how necessary it is to treat all other expressions of LIFE as we (I) wish to be treated.

  2. Bomber this ” raw news ” needs more attention. Can T.D.B make it part of the main page ?

    “The silent killer here is the very same one that’s haunting our endangered albatross – by catch taken by our fishing vessels, which is not independently monitored.”
    Until N.Z.F and its dirty money is out of the decision making process and that includes taking Nash out of the mix we will not get the much needed change our marine environment desperately needs.

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