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Keywords
Buoys
Day
Fish
Fishing (Industry)
Fishing nets
Fishing ships
KWCI (GPI)
Oceans (campaign title)
Outdoors
Pirate fishing
Longway 010 - Defending Our Oceans Tour (West Africa: 2006)
Chinese fishing boat Longway 010. The rusting fishing vessel appears unusable but is still in use. The location is 60 miles off Conakry, Guinea. This is the hidden story behind pirate fishing - the conditions of near-slavery imposed by ruthless fishing companies in the rush for quick money. The men on board aren't pirates - they're the victims, left to rot on broken-down trawlers, half a world away from their families. Human life is cheap, and profits take priority as the workers exist in terrible conditions often waiting for crew that never arrives. Some of them have been at sea for two years, and their trawler hasn't visited a port.
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Defending Our Oceans Tour in West Africa
Pirate fishing is happening right now in every ocean. Greenpeace and the Environmental Justice Foundation have been patrolling the waters off Guinea, one of the poorest countries in Africa, to document fishing activities. Illegal activity can be linked to fish imports in Las Palmas, a number of licensed boats and leads also to the forgotten men inhabiting the "zombie" vessels off the coast of West Africa. Over one hundred vessels were observed during this investigation and nearly half are engaged in, or linked to illegal fishing activities. The UK Department for International Development estimates this cash and food starved nation is losing US$100 million each year in stolen fish.
Related Collections:
Defending Our Oceans Tour in West Africa (Photo + Video)
Witnessing the Plunder 2006
Conceptually similar
Unique identifier:
GP08JG
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
24/03/2006
Locations:
Conakry
,
Guinea
,
North Atlantic Ocean
Credit line:
© Greenpeace / Pierre Gleizes
Size:
2860px × 1905px 1.86 MB
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)