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Four Trawlers Arrested in Protected Waters Off Benin

Tuesday, 17 Dec, 2019

On December 8th armed Beninese Navy sailors worked with Sea Shepherd crew to covertly apprehend and arrest four industrial trawlers fishing illegally in the waters of Benin, a country in West Africa. Photos by Leon Greiner/Sea Shepherd. 

A Beninese Navy Sailor places an illegal fishing vessel under arrest.

The fishing vessels Fada 10, Tian Yu 5, Tian Yu 6 and Tian Yu 8 were busted when the ship’s radar of the Sea Shepherd vessel Bob Barker caught them fishing inside a special management area reserved for local artisanal fishermen that extends up to five nautical miles from the coast of Benin. The trawlers were fishing so close to the coast that their lights could be seen from shore.

A Sea Shepherd small boat approaches one of the illegal fishing vessels.

The three Tian Yu vessels were also intercepted fishing inside the Bouche du Roi ecological reserve. The reserve consists of mangroves and lagoons critical to fish nurseries and is part of the MAB UNESCO-listed Mono Biosphere Reserve, home to nearly 2 million people in Benin and Togo, and particularly rich in biodiversity as it is positioned in a wildlife corridor frequented by migrating tuna and humpback whales.

All four trawlers were escorted to the port of Cotonou for detention.

A Beninese Navy Sailor on the aft deck of one of the arrested illegal fishing vessels.

The successful arrests occurred after the Bob Barker returned to Beninese waters to conduct joint at-sea patrols between the Benin Navy and Sea Shepherd under the leadership of Navy Captain F. M. Ahoyo, the Maritime Commissioner of Benin.

A Beninese Navy Sailor prepares to board one of the illegal fishing vessels.

Earlier this year, the government of Benin partnered with Sea Shepherd for Operation Guegou (local Wxla language for “Big Tuna”) to tackle illegal fishing in the Gulf of Guinea, with Sea Shepherd crew and local nongovernmental organization (NGO) Eco-Benin working together with law enforcement agents representing the State Action on the Sea, the Navy of Benin and the Ministry of Fisheries on board the Sea Shepherd vessel Bob Barker to stop poaching activity. 

The Captain of an illegal fishing vessel exits the bridge of his vessel as the Beninese Navy conducts their inspection of the vessel.

Sea Shepherd’s partnership with Benin marked the fourth government in the Gulf of Guinea to join a growing effort to stop illegal fishing in the region through joint at-sea patrols.

Captain Anteo Broadfield observes the inspection of the ‘Fada 10’.

Since 2016, Sea Shepherd has also been working in partnership with the governments of Gabon, Liberia, São Tomé and Príncipe, Tanzania, Namibia and The Gambia to combat fisheries crime by providing the use of civilian offshore patrol vessels to Africa.

Read more about Sea Shepherd’s campaigns to stop illegal fishing

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