Guest guest Posted March 9, 2005 Report Share Posted March 9, 2005 Greenpeace swimmers disrupt dolphin-killing trawlers Last edited: 3/8/05 Greenpeace activists today continued their campaign to protect dolphins in the Channel by trying to stop two French 'pair trawlers' from fishing for sea bass. Greenpeace swimmers put themselves in the path of the two vessels Sonia Jerome and Cote d'Amour in an attempt to stop them pair trawling - a fishing method that traps and drowns dolphins in the giant net towed between the two vessels. Just hours previously, around 9am, observers onboard the Greenpeace ship Esperanza discovered a dead dolphin approximately 50 miles south of Plymouth, in UK waters, bearing the telltale injuries of having been caught and killed in a fishing net. Within a 12-mile radius of the body, eight sets of French pair trawlers, 16 boats in all, carried on fishing. The female dolphin was lactating, indicating that she had recently given birth. This is the first time that direct action has been taken against French pair trawlers, who form the majority of the pair trawl fleet fishing for sea bass in the Channel. The fleet is estimated to kill thousands of dolphins every year. Two Greenpeace swimmers entered the water in the path of the Sonia Jerome and Cote d'Amour at 11.15am today close to the area where the dead dolphin was earlier recovered. The swimmers, holding on to buoys emblazoned 'Stop Killing Dolphins' and the French equivalent 'Stop Au Massacre Des Dauphins', were swept aside in the wake of the trawlers and picked up by a Greenpeace inflatable boat. In recent days, Greenpeace has successfully stopped UK pair trawlers from fishing on two occasions. Greenpeace is concerned that government observers on UK sea bass trawlers last year recorded 169 dolphins killed in the huge net dragged between two boats. Government figures estimate that the UK fleet alone was responsible for the deaths of 439 dolphins last year. The UK and French fleets combined could be killing over 2,000 dolphins a year. According to the environmental group, Ben Bradshaw, the Fisheries Minister, has consistently failed to take the necessary measures to protect dolphins around the UK. Sarah Duthie, Greenpeace oceans campaigner onboard the Esperanza, said: " We shouldn't have to do this. But we have no choice, given Bradshaw's shameful lack of concern for dolphins and failure to address the thousands of dolphin deaths caused by pair trawlers every year. " The dead dolphin we discovered today was surrounded by pair trawlers. This ridiculously destructive form of fishing must be banned. " The Esperanza left Falmouth on the 17 February to campaign for a ban on pair trawling for sea bass in the Channel. An independent team of researchers from the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS) is on board to further assess the conservation and welfare threats to whale, dolphin and porpoise populations. Greenpeace want the government to investigate, which other fishing methods are also killing dolphins and porpoises and take action. Worldwide, the unintentional capture in fishing nets of dolphins, porpoises and other marine species is recognised to be a major problem. It is estimated to kill some 300,000 whales, dolphins and porpoises a year. Overall it has been estimated that 23% of the global fisheries catch is returned, dead, to the sea. Further information For more information please contact the Greenpeace press office on 020 7865 8255. Mail - 250MB free storage. Do more. Manage less. http://info.mail./mail_250 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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