WHILE their warships patrol the Gulf of
Aden to protect merchant shipping from Somali pirates, a number of those nations
are directly linked to foreign fishing fleets that are plundering Somalia's fish
stocks, says a new paper on reasons behind the growth of piracy off the Horn of
Africa.
There are warships from India, Malaysia,
Britain, the US, France, Russia, Spain and South Korea in the region shepherding
merchant shipping and pursuing pirates but largely ignoring the illegal foreign
fishers.
Somalia's 3300-kilometre coast is the
longest on the African continent. The United Nations' Food and Agriculture
Organisation estimates there are "700 foreign-owned vessels fully engaged in
unlicensed fishing in Somali waters".
The collapse of the local fishing industry
and subsequent poverty of coastal communities has been cited as one reason
piracy has flourished in Somalia's lawless semi-autonomous province of
Puntland.
Vessels from France, Spain, Japan, South
Korea, Taiwan, Egypt, Kenya, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Yemen, Belize
and Honduras exploit Somalia's fish stocks with virtual impunity, says Dr Clive
Schofield's paper, Plundered Waters: Somalia's Maritime Resource
Insecurity.
"It is particularly ironic that many of the
nations that are presently contributing warships to the anti-piracy flotillas
patrolling, or set to patrol, the waters off the Horn of Africa, are themselves
directly linked to the foreign fishing vessels that are busily plundering
Somalia's offshore resources," Dr Schofield, a researcher with the University of
Wollongong's Australian National Centre for Ocean Resources and
Security.
Without condoning acts of violence at sea,
he said: "The desperate Somalis who hijack shipping off their coast are in fact
not the only 'pirates' operating in these waters."
It was estimated that foreign fishing
vessels were taking considerably more protein out of Somalia's waters than they
were supplying to Somalia in the form of humanitarian food aid, he
said.
With almost a third of Somalia's 10 million
people in acute need of aid, the systematic theft from its fisheries seriously
affects the strife-torn country's ability to feed itself.