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Pakistan captures 42 fishermen with 7 boats off Gujarat coast

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AHMEDABAD: The Pakistan Maritime Security Agency (PMSA) has apprehended 42 Indian fishermen and seized seven boats off the Gujarat coast, an official of a fishermen's body said here today.

"The fishermen along with seven boats were captured by the PMSA in two separate incidents from near International Maritime Border Line (IMBL) off Gujarat coast," National Fishworkers' Forum (NFF) secretary Manish Lodhari told PTI.

"While 18 fishermen sailing on three boats were captured along with four boats today. In all, seven boats with 42 fishermen have been captured so far since last night," he said.

The seized boats belong to Okha and Mangrol, he added.

This is the first such incident in April, Lodhari said, adding that in March, 231 Indian fishermen were arrested by the Pakistani authorities and 40 boats were seized.

On March 26, the PMSA had apprehended over 100 Indian fishermen and seized 19 boats near IMBL.
 
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Catch an Indian has already started. Good we need to catch few more Indians.
 
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Catch an Indian has already started. Good we need to catch few more Indians.
Its the other way around though,Indians are the one who are catching Pakistanies,3 dead and 2 alive and one still missing,its one of the 7 boats which ramed into Pakistani boat and it drowned.your should stop entering out waters illegally to kidnap our fishermen.
 
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Its the other way around though,Indians are the one who are catching Pakistanies,3 dead and 2 alive and one still missing,its one of the 7 boats which ramed into Pakistani boat and it drowned.your should stop entering out waters illegally to kidnap our fishermen.

its part of their plan as a negotiation tool, why else will they go deep into Indians water territory. they are preparing for what's coming next, this all started with that missing spy, and Pakistan seriously paranoid about all the militant network details he will leak.

stay tuned for something big this month, till them these captured fishermen and soldiers will be a common occurrence.
 
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Oooh Pakistan is angry and aggressive...
First they do terrorism in Pakistan, second they complain when punished - third they refuse to release our fishermen? How dare they ... ?

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Its the other way around though,Indians are the one who are catching Pakistanies,3 dead and 2 alive and one still missing,its one of the 7 boats which ramed into Pakistani boat and it drowned.your should stop entering out waters illegally to kidnap our fishermen.
Ironic how you are boasting about a capsizing boat.

You c. ts dont even pay ransom to save your sailors & we donate to help em and yet we have this moron moaning here.

Illegally entering and kidnapping uour fishermen?

Why is it that its always indian fishermen getting "kidnapped" by all regional navies, from sri lanka to Pakistan?

Your waters are depleted and your fishermen poach in Pak waters illegally causing us loss in billions.

Here are a few facts to slap your face with;


‘Illegal fishing by Indians causes multi-billion-rupee losses to Pakistan’

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KARACHI: The country incurs revenue losses of billions of rupees every year due to the ‘illegal fishing activities’ of Indians, who deliberately violate Pakistan sea limits, said commander Ghazi Salahuddin of the Pakistan Maritime Security Agency during a workshop held at local hotel on Wednesday.

Part of a USAID-funded project being implemented by the World Wide Fund for Nature-Pakistan, the workshop was the last of a series of such events conducted in different cities to seek recommendations from relevant stakeholders to develop a national level strategy to combat wildlife crimes in the country.

Giving a presentation on the efforts in place to control illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (IUU)/wildlife trafficking, commander Salahuddin said illegal fishing activities of Indian vessels was a key threat to fisheries resources.

He said the Indian boats equipped with global positioning system (GPS) deliberately violated Pakistan sea limits to poach fish available in the Indus delta.

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“They are not inadvertent crossers as widely believed here. Most Indian boats are fitted with the GPS, which shows that fishermen are well aware of their locations. Second, they are often caught fishing 100 nautical miles inside our waters,” he said.

Citing a PMSA study, he said around 600 Indian vessels entered Pakistani waters for fishing illegally every month while the revenue loss of four-month of illegal Indian fishing had been estimated to be around Rs8bn.

Replying to a question, he said the number of Pakistani fishermen caught on the other side of the border was small as compared to the Indian fishermen caught here.

Other crimes, he said, could be carried out through illegal fishing. Recently, he said, the PSMA had confiscated an Iranian boat with illegal oil and fine quality drugs.

“We should have some national plans to take up the matter of illegal fishing with regional countries. All boats operating from our coastline should be properly registered,” he said.

Replying to a question regarding checking of banned fishing nets, he cited a case in which the organisation had to face a lot of political pressure when it stopped two boats. “If we start checking every boat, no boat will be operated from here.”

Syed Ali Raza, independent lawyer and member of the wildlife commission of Punjab, briefed the audience about the legal perspective on animal rights. Unlike the Bangladesh, Indian and Afghanistan constitutions, he noted, there was no mention of wildlife in Pakistani constitution.

All the inherited laws regarding wildlife, he said, were not specifically framed with the objective to conserve wildlife, but rather enacted with relevance to human life.

Recent cases relating to the hunting of houbara bustard and the ‘political use’ of an animal, he said, had highlighted the gaps in laws relating to wildlife.

Technical adviser with WWF-P Mohammad Moazzam Khan shed light on various aspects of IUU fishing issues in Balochistan and called for effective implementation of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC) regulation of which Pakistan was a signatory.

He appreciated the fact that the workshop included representation of all major stakeholders that had a critical role in the battle against illegal wildlife trade and was an important milestone to eliminate wildlife crime from the country.

The event, he said, would help strengthen knowledge and skills of law-enforcement agencies and develop partnerships to effectively curb wildlife crimes.

The recommendations put forward by experts representing Sindh and Balochistan wildlife departments, the ministry of climate change, Pakistan customs, the judicial academy and the marine fisheries department, included updating the relevant legislation.

It was pointed out that the Sindh wildlife protection ordinance did not provide protection to the marine cetaceans and the law needed to be amended to include these species.

Participants also suggested that the draft regulations to implement the Pakistan Trade Control of Wild Fauna and Flora Act 2012 at the provincial level should be finalised and implemented on immediate basis.

There were also recommendations for setting up rehab facilities for confiscated animals and wildlife information desks at the exit and entry points, which had been recognised as illegal trade hotspots.

Published in Dawn, February 25th, 2016
 
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Indian fishermen go into our EEZ which is rich with various amounts of fish and is not polluted. This activity had been going for decades without any action taken by us - leading to severe cases of over-fishing.

Indian media as expected will always pretend they are the victims and claim that Pakistan is randomly sending marines and ships to their coasts to kidnap fisherman.
 
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