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European Parliament rejects EU fisheries
The EU fisheries in Western Sahara have today been voted down in the European Parliament. Reports made for the European Commission have shown that the EU fisheries in Western Sahara are a complete waste of EU taxpayers’ money, and contribute to destruction of marine life offshore Western Sahara. EU fleet must now return from Western Sahara.
Published: 14.12 - 2011 13:24Printer version    
Today’s plenary vote in the European Parliament, over European Union fisheries in Western Sahara, took place around 11:30 today.

The parliament voted over whether to accept the 1 year extension of the EU fisheries in Western Sahara. The agreement is entered into between the EU and Western Sahara's occupying power Morocco. The extension was approved by a tiny minority in the Council of Ministers in June, as the former 2007-2011 agreement expired in March.

Reports done for the European Commission have showed that the EU fisheries in Western Sahara are a complete waste of EU’s taxpayers money, and contribute to destruction of marine life offshore Western Sahara. In addition, the Parliament’s own legal service had already concluded that the agreement is in violation of international law, since Western Sahara is not part of Morocco, and the people of the territory have never approved the fisheries.

In November, both the parliament’s Budget Committee and the Development Committee recommended that the fisheries be stopped. In the Fisheries Committee, the rapporteur Carl Haglund from Finland also recommended a rejection. However, a small minority of the fisheries committee managed to change the conclusion of the Haglund report so it appeared in favour instead of rejecting the agreement.

The vote today, was over whether to approve or reject the changed and nonsensical Haglund report which had been amended to accept the controversial fisheries.

The result was that 326 voted against the report, thus demanding the fisheries to stop.

296 parliamentarians, mostly following the Spanish fishing interests, voted in favour of the Haglund report. 58 abstained.

The consequence is that the EU fleet has to immediately stop fisheries in Western Sahara and return home from the occupied territories of Western Sahara.

"This is a complete victory for the Saharawi people. The parliament has refused to blindly follow the interests of the Spanish fisheries industry. We expect this to have consequences for the Parliament's handling of future agreements with Morocco that involve the territory of Western Sahara. The UN has clearly stated that the Saharawi people has a right to be consulted on such issues", stated Sara Eyckmans of Western Sahara Resource Watch.

Spanish fisheries interests are already pushing for a new and illegal 4 year fisheries agreement in the occupied waters from beginning of 2012. Morocco has lobbied hard for the continuation of the fisheries offshore the territory it illegally occupied in 1975.

Western Sahara Resource Watch has since 2006 been working to stop the EU fisheries in the occupied Western Sahara. Help us to protect the rights of the Saharawis by making a donation.

    

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17.01 - 2012 / 17.01 - 2012European Commission seeks new fish deal with Morocco
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01.12 - 2011 / 01.12 - 20117 Dec: Conference on EU fisheries in European Parliament
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07.11 - 2011 / 07.11 - 2011Two EU Parliament committees reject EU-Morocco Fish Pact
06.11 - 2011 / 06.11 - 2011Bastagli: Europe turns its back on the Arab Spring's forgotten nation
03.11 - 2011 / 03.11 - 2011Sharks in danger of extinction in Western Sahara
24.10 - 2011 / 24.10 - 2011Scottish fishing sector favours illegal fisheries in occupied waters
19.10 - 2011 / 11.10 - 2011Budget rapporteur calls for rejection of fish pact
19.10 - 2011 / 10.10 - 2011Development rapporteur urges Parliament to thumb down fish deal
04.10 - 2011 / 04.10 - 2011Commission criticised over handling of Morocco agreement
24.09 - 2011 / 24.09 - 2011Fisheries rapporteur recommends end to EU-Morocco fish pact
07.09 - 2011 / 07.09 - 2011Divisive Fish Pact possibly referred to European Court of Justice
01.09 - 2011 / 01.09 - 2011MEPs' disappointment with fisheries agreement with Morocco
11.08 - 2011 / 08.08 - 2011Ireland unsatisfied by Moroccan fish report






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The EU is paying Morocco to fish in occupied Western Sahara. The EU-Morocco Fisheries Agreement is both politically controversial and in violation of international law. The international Fish Elsewhere! campaign demands the EU to cancel its highly unethical operations, and go fishing somewhere else. No fishing in Western Sahara should take place until the conflict is solved.
"EU fisheries in Western Sahara must be stopped"




Western Sahara human rights activist Aminatou Haidar hopes for increased attention to the EU plundering of occupied Western Sahara.

READ ALSO

15.12 - 2011
EU Observer: Morocco expels EU fishing boats
15.12 - 2011
BBC News: Morocco's fish fight: High stakes over Western Sahara
15.12 - 2011
European Voice: MEPs reject EU-Morocco fisheries pact
15.12 - 2011
Reuters: EU lawmakers reject Morocco fisheries pact
15.12 - 2011
Public Service Europe: EU-Morocco fisheries deal is 'illegal'






Human rights activist Malak Amidane denounces EU fisheries