{"id":95657,"date":"2022-06-24T13:41:12","date_gmt":"2022-06-24T08:11:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/?post_type=newss&p=95657"},"modified":"2022-06-24T13:41:12","modified_gmt":"2022-06-24T08:11:12","slug":"pakistan-they-own-the-ocean-gwadars-struggle-with-illegal-fishing","status":"publish","type":"newss","link":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/newss\/pakistan-they-own-the-ocean-gwadars-struggle-with-illegal-fishing\/","title":{"rendered":"Pakistan: They own the ocean Gwadar\u2019s struggle with illegal fishing"},"content":{"rendered":"

On November 29, 2021, I had just returned to my hometown of Gwadar after completing my master\u2019s degree in Sussex. A lot had changed in just 14 months.<\/p>\n

As I entered the town, the first things I noticed were several new roads and a lot of new construction in progress. But the next and most unusual sight was of a huge rally of women on Marine Drive, a seafront, four-lane road in the west of Gwadar. Hundreds of women of all ages and socioeconomic backgrounds, but largely from the local fishing communities, dominated this rally, which convened the same day I arrived. I have lived in Gwadar almost my entire life here, but had never seen something like this before. To find out what exactly was going on I had to put on my journalist hat as soon as I reached home.<\/p>\n

It turned out that a local political activist, Maulana Hidayat-ur-Rehman,<\/u>\u00a0was\u00a0leading a movement to protest a list of issues Gwadar is still dealing with, despite decades of \u201cdevelopment\u201d work in the town.<\/p>\n

Today, Gwadar, and particularly its port, is known as the gateway to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) and is therefore an important city for both China and Pakistan. This new interest from Beijing and Islamabad changed what was a little-known fishing village in Balochistan to an emerging port city. While a lot has changed for the better for Gwadar\u2019s residents, many basic issues still remain unaddressed, like water and power supply, proper healthcare, and so on. One of the biggest issues of all, not just in Gwadar but in the rest of the coastal belt of Balochistan, is illegal fishing. For decades illegal fishing has made life hard for those relying on the fisheries economy and ocean as the main source of food. This includes almost the entire coastal population.<\/p>\n

To navigate this situation better, it is important to understand what illegal fishing exactly is. As per the\u00a0World Ocean Review, it is a violation of fisheries laws and regulations of a state, where foreign vessels enter a certain jurisdiction without legal permission and target high-value species that are illegal to fish. Often these boats deploy outlawed wire nets behind their vessels, dragging the nets along the seafloor to pull up everything that comes their way. They thus end up with huge quantities of bycatch, which they usually dump back into the sea (or sell to local factories in extremely low prices). They then misreport the kind of species and quantities of their haul \u2013 if they ever report their catches at all (many don\u2019t).<\/p>\n