Niue Treaty on Cooperation in Fisheries
Niue Treaty on Cooperation in Fisheries
APIA, SAMOA, WEDNESDAY 16 OCTOBER 2008:
At the second meeting of
Parties to the Niue Treaty on Cooperation
in Fisheries
Surveillanceand Law Enforcement in the South
Pacific
Region, held yesterday,Pacific Islands Forum
Fisheries Agency (FFA)
members agreed to cooperate
further to combat illegal fishing.
The Niue Treaty is an
agreement on cooperation between FFA members
about
monitoring, control and surveillance of fishing – it
includes
provisions on exchange of information (about
where the position and
speed of vessels at sea, which
vessels are without licences) plus
procedures for
cooperation in monitoring, prosecuting and
penalising
illegal fishing vessels. The efforts by the
Niue Treaty Parties to
work together and with regional
organisations were supported by the
Pacific Forum Leaders
in their 2007 Vava'u Declaration on Pacific
Fisheries
Resources and in the 2008 Niue Declaration.
Niue Treaty
signatories are FFA members and they cooperate to
share
information and cooperate in regional surveillance
operations – such
as Operation Kurukuru, Operation
Bigeye, Operation Island Chief,
Operation Rai Balang and
Operation Tui Moana – for the period of the
operation.
They also use bilateral and trilateral
subsidiary
agreements, but there are advantages in having
a multilateral
agreement to combat illegal fishing. By
having just one regional level
agreement on this issue,
it spares small island developing States
the
administration and cost of having to negotiate many
bilateral
agreements. This agreement means that
monitoring, control and
surveillance officers from
different countries can then act, with
increased speed
and efficiency, to combat illegal fishing.
This year's
meeting agreed to progress work on a draft
multilateral
subsidiary agreement patterned on the Niue
Treaty subsidiary
agreements, which would spell out the
details of how countries will
cooperate in their efforts
to detect and prosecute illegal fishing.
The Niue Treaty
is a complementary initiative to FFA efforts, endorsed
by
Fisheries Ministers, to develop a regional Monitoring,
Control and
Surveillance Strategy.
FFA Director
General Su'a N.F. Tanielu said: "We are pleased to
see
progress by the Niue Treaty Parties towards
implementing their
agreement to cooperate on a regional
basis for better control of
fishing in the region. The
subsidiary agreement currently in
development will be an
important tool to combat illegal, unreported
and
unregulated fishing for the countries involved."
"This
regional effort is consistent with calls by Forum Leaders
who
said in the Vava'u Declaration they 'supported and
endorsed efforts by
FFA to take forward as a matter of
urgency work to examine the
potential for new
multilateral Pacific regional arrangements patterned
on
the Niue Treaty Subsidiary Agreement model for exchange
of
fisheries law enforcement data, cross-vesting of
enforcement powers,
and use of fisheries data for other
law enforcement
activities'."
ENDS