Yet again, a fishing vessel managed by a Moroccan ex-general is dumping tonnes of fish in occupied Western Sahara. New video reveals the environmental mismanagement.
Western Sahara Resource Watch has received videos of the vessel Buland, involved in an operation of allegedly dumping "tonnes of fish" offshore occupied Western Sahara.
The fisheries practice is controversial in itself, as the trawler is fishing in the occupied territories of Western Sahara under a Moroccan licence and flag, even though no state in the world recognise the territory as being part of Morocco. In addition to the political, ethical and legal aspects of such Moroccan fisheries offshore the territory they hold under military occupation, there are serious environmental aspects to the management of the stocks.
The vessel in the video, 'Buland', has a licence to fish sardines. So what happens when one gets the fish species not part of the quota? Well, they would dump it overboard. According to the sources that sent WSRW the videos, the vessel dumped 'tonnes' of fish this day, including the fish species sea bream. The video was shot some five months ago, in the waters offshore the city of Dakhla.
The trawler is owned by Atuneros del Sur SARL which in turn is controlled by the Moroccan company Ylara Holding. Ylara is presided by the former Moroccan general Hassan Oualit. See te company leadership on Ylara's now unavailable website.
This is not the first time that amateur videos document severe mismanagement of the fishing stocks offshore the occupied territories, committed by a vessel owned by an ex-general. In 2013, WSRW published photos of the vessel Adrar, owned by another Moroccan general, which had dumped 1000 tonnes of fish that year overboard. The role of Moroccan armed forces in the fisheries sector is elaborated in this leaked 2008 cable from the US embassy.
Fish are also sometimes dumped as garbage on land, see images here from 2013 and from last year. WSRW also published discards of fish in 2012. Half people of Western Sahara live as refugees in the Algerian desert, following the Moroccan occupation, depending on humanitarian aid.
The vessel Buland was originally Norwegian owned (named Røttingøy at the time), but sold from Dales Rederi AS to Western Sahara in 2011. It has IMO number 7713010 and is currently located in the port of Dakhla. In 2012-2013 it was managed by Icelandic company Neptune. Greenpeace did a report “Exporting Exploitation” in 2013 documenting the flow of vessels from Northern Europe to Western Sahara.
Last week, the Norwegian shipping company Green Reefers delivered frozen fish to Russia that had been caught in occupied Western Sahara in violation of international law.
The export of phosphate rock from occupied Western Sahara has never been lower than in 2019. This is revealed in the new WSRW report P for Plunder, published today.
Morocco shipped 1.93 million tonnes of phosphate out of occupied Western Sahara in 2018, worth an estimated $164 million, new report shows. Here is all you need to know about the volume, values, vessels and clients.
Morocco shipped over 1.5 million tonnes of phosphate out of occupied Western Sahara in 2017, to the tune of over $142 million. But the number of international importers of the contentious conflict mineral is waning, WSRW's annual report shows.