[Reader-list] Fishers irked over order on marine

T Peter peter.ksmtf at gmail.com
Fri May 6 02:16:43 CDT 2016


*Fishers irked over order on marine*

T. NANDAKUMAR <http://www.thehindu.com/profile/author/t.-nandakumar/>

http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Thiruvananthapuram/fishers-irked-over-order-on-marine/article8563502.ece

*Demand for urgent measures to ensure fishermen’s safety at sea*

The ruling issued by the International Tribunal last week to release an
Italian marine facing a charge of murdering two Indian fishermen at sea in
2012 has invited strong protest from fishers and triggered a fresh demand
for urgent measures to ensure safety at sea.

While one section of fishers feel that the government had failed to present
its case before the arbitration court at The Hague, another segment feels
that the incident had exposed the ignorance among Indian fishers about
marine laws and the signalling system used by mariners.

“With about 4,000 vessels plying the Arabian sea daily, the absence of a
demarcated route for shipping can lead to collisions and confrontations at
sea, resulting in incidents like the firing on Indian fishermen,” says
Joseph Xavier Kalappurakkal, general secretary, All Kerala Fishing Boat
Operators Association. “It is high time the government stepped in to
demarcate a shipping channel and impart training to Indian fishers in
marine laws and signalling systems.

The high traffic density also justifies the need to deploy the Automatic
Identification System (AIS) to keep a constant tab on the movement of
vessels”.

Two Indian fishermen were killed when they were fired upon by the marines
on duty aboard MV Enrica Lexie, an Italian flagged oil tanker off the
Kerala coast in 2012.

Expressing dismay over the ruling of the UN arbitration court, the National
Fishworkers Forum (NFF) said the government of India was answerable for the
verdict. “It is clear that the government had diluted its commitment to
stand firm on the trial of the Italian marines in India”, says T. Peter,
national secretary, NFF. Mr. Xavier said wind and ocean currents and the
pursuit of shoals often forced fishermen to veer off course, inadvertently
ending up in hostile territory, to be arrested and incarcerated.

“The solution is to set up a trans-boundary authority with representatives
from ocean rim countries. The authority could be tasked with securing the
release of fishermen after ascertaining their identity. But the government
has not responded to the long-pending demand for such a mechanism,” he said.


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