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EU gives 'red card' to Cameroon over fishing
by AFP Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Jan 5, 2023

The EU on Thursday gave a "red card" to Cameroon for failing to cooperate in the international fight against illegal fishing.

The European Commission said in a statement it had identified Cameroon as a "non-cooperating country," earning the "red card" designation, and would ask EU member states to add the country to the bloc's blacklist.

It said that was because Cameroon continues to register fishing vessels operating outside its waters without sufficiently monitoring their activities -- including one vessel involved in illegal fishing.

A "red card" could prevent Cameroon being able to export its fishery products to the European Union.

However, at the moment no such exports happen because Cameroon's products do not meet EU sanitary standards.

The designation could also ban EU companies from buying Cameroon-flagged fishing vessels or carrying out joint fishing operations with such vessels, or reflagging such vessels.

EU fishing commissioner Virginijus Sinkevicius said "we have zero tolerance for IUU (illegal, unreported and unregulated) fishing" and the proposed designation of Cameroon reflected that.

He said the commission was ready to continue talks with Cameroon on the issue so that it could meet the required standards.

The commission statement said the EU views illegal fishing as "one of the most serious threats to the sustainable exploitation of living aquatic resources."

It said it also jeopardises the bloc's common fisheries policy and its efforts to promote better ocean governance.

The commission has issued illegal fishing "red cards" to six other countries since 2013: Belize, Cambodia, Comoros, Guinea, Sri Lanka, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.

Of those, Belize, Guinea and Sri Lanka have made changes to get off the EU blacklist.


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WATER WORLD
Coral bleaching causing 'unnecessary' fish fights
Paris (AFP) Jan 4, 2023
Fish that have lost food due to mass coral bleaching are getting into more unnecessary fights, causing them to expend precious energy and potentially threatening their survival, new research said Wednesday. With the future of the world's coral reefs threatened by climate change, a team of researchers studied how a mass bleaching event affected 38 species of butterflyfish. The colourfully patterned reef fish are the first to feel the effect of bleaching because they eat coral, so their "food sour ... read more

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