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Endangered biodiversity, endangered people
On European Maritime Day, Western Sahara Resource Watch (WSRW) demands that the depletion of European fish stocks not be used to justify illegal fisheries practices elsewhere.
Published: 20.05 - 2010 15:54Printer version    
A massively subsidized EU fishing fleet has resulted in hopelessly overfished European seas. Although the European Commission is working towards more sustainable fisheries practices, the increasing emphasis on fishing outside EU waters has brought to the fore concerns about operations under the EU’s significant network of bilateral Fisheries Partnership Agreements (FPA).

A particularly controversial fisheries agreement is the FPA between the EU and the Kingdom of Morocco. Relying on the agreement’s vague territorial definitions, the EU allows its vessels to fish in the waters adjacent to Western Sahara - a territory largely occupied by Morocco since 1975 and labelled by the UN as a Non-Self Governing Territory pending the process of decolonization. With Moroccan stocks largely depleted, the bulk of European fishing under the FPA carried out in Western Saharan waters.  In effect, millions of EU taxpayer’s Euros are paid to Morocco for access to fish that does not belong to Morocco.

For over 35 years, Morocco has illegally exploited Western Sahara’s natural resources against the explicit will of the territory’s indigenous population, the Saharawi people. These gains are poured into furthering Morocco’s brutal and illegal military occupation.

Echoing a legal opinion issued by the UN’s Legal Adviser to the Security Council in 2002, a recently published legal opinion by the European Parliament’s legal services concluded that the EU-Morocco FPA is illegal to the extent that it ignores the wishes and interests of the Saharawi people. However, the Saharawi have never been consulted on any element of the agreement, and their democratically elected and internationally recognised government-in-exile, known as the Frente POLISARIO, has repeatedly informed the European Commission that they do not want nor benefit from the agreement.

Despite the unambiguous legal situation, and the egregious human rights violations perpetrated by Morocco in the occupied territory, the EU Commission continues to turn a blind eye to the illegality of its agreement, and to ignore the protests of the rightful owners of the fisheries resources it is stealing.. In doing so, the EU is implicitly legitimising Morocco’s illegal and untenable claim over its southern neighbour, and undermining the UN’s attempts to find a solution to the last unresolved colonial conflict in Africa.

The European Commission will soon commence negotiations with Morocco to establish terms for the continuation of the EU-Morocco Fisheries Partnership Agreement, which is scheduled to end in February 2011. On European Maritime Day, WSRW demands that Western Sahara be explicitly excluded from any follow-up agreement, as required by international law.

So far, 14.000 individuals and 561 organisations have signed WSRW’s petition asking the European Commission to put an end to the EU’s illegal fisheries in Western Sahara. Support the protest by signing up here.


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Top
News:

20.07 - 2010 / 05.11 - 2009Sign the petition: Stop the EU fisheries in Western Sahara!
14.07 - 2010 / 14.07 - 2010EU Commission and MEPs deem future EU-Moroccan FPA uncertain
11.07 - 2010 / 11.07 - 2010"Europe's assault on Western Sahara"
07.07 - 2010 / 06.07 - 2010Nordic parliamentarians call for halt of unethical EU fisheries
01.07 - 2010 / 01.07 - 2010"Problems renewing the fisheries agreement with Morocco"
01.07 - 2010 / 01.07 - 2010EU puts self-interest before peace in Western Sahara
01.07 - 2010 / 01.07 - 2010WSRW: "Commission misrepresents international law"
01.07 - 2010 / 24.06 - 2010European Commission defends its fisheries
23.06 - 2010 / 23.06 - 2010Swedish Social Democrats ask Greek help to stop EU fisheries
05.06 - 2010 / 05.06 - 2010Fishing in Western Sahara Hot EU Question
04.06 - 2010 / 03.06 - 2010Morocco rejects visit from European Parliament
31.05 - 2010 / 30.05 - 2010You are paying for this robbery
20.05 - 2010 / 20.05 - 2010Endangered biodiversity, endangered people
12.05 - 2010 / 12.05 - 2010Western Sahara not part of EFTA-Morocco free trade agreement
12.05 - 2010 / 12.05 - 2010Norway: No way for Western Sahara free trade
05.04 - 2010 / 05.04 - 2010"Does European Commission know the consequences of the agreement?"
14.03 - 2010 / 14.03 - 2010GUE/NGL demands cancellation of illegal EU-Morocco fisheries agreement
14.03 - 2010 / 14.03 - 2010"There can be no doubt about its illegality"
09.03 - 2010 / 09.03 - 2010Demonstration against EU-Moroccan relations
07.03 - 2010 / 07.03 - 2010Polisario requests EU to stop fisheries






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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"
06.11 - 2009




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

READ ALSO

28.07 - 2010
European Voice: Human-rights concerns put fishing deal in danger
25.05 - 2010
IPS: 'EU Subsidises Companies Guilty of Illegal Fishing'
11.04 - 2010
Giant purchases from Morocco/Western Sahara stopped
26.02 - 2010
Portuguese MEPs: Stop EU fisheries
24.02 - 2010
Press release from Green Party, Sweden

The Fish Elsewhere! petition to the European Commission is available in:
  • English
  • Spanish
  • French
  • Arabic
  • Swedish
  • German
  • Portuguese
  • Hungarian
  • Italian
  • Dutch
  • Finnish
  • Polish
  • Estonian
  • Romanian
  • Slovenian


  • Do you have any questions, comments or suggestions to the petition? Do not hesitate to send us a mail on contact@wsrw.org.





    Human rights activist Malak Amidane denounces EU fisheries