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Seychelles is hosting the Second Meeting for
Eastern and Southern African States on the Development of a Fisheries
Framework Agreement within the Economic Partnership Agreement
Negotiation Process with the European Union.
The objective of the two-day meeting, which opens
Monday July 5 in the morning at the Plantation Club Hotel, is to
consider the first draft of the Fisheries Framework Agreement (FFA) and
to make modifications to it so that it can be presented to the next
Eastern and Southern African (ESA) States Regional Negotiating Forum in
Entebbe, Uganda on 19-20 July 2004 and then submitted to the ESA
ministers as the negotiating position of the ESA region on ocean
fisheries.
The ESA Draft FFA has been prepared as a result of
the first meeting ( Berjaya Mahé Beach Hotel, April 2004 ) of the group
of countries which have ocean fisheries industries and which have agreed
to negotiate an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with the European
Union as part of the ESA Group.
According to a communiqué from the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, the ESA FFA is to be negotiated to protect the
interests of the small ESA states like Seychelles and avoid a depletion
of fish-stocks in the Western Indian Ocean and Red Sea, upon which many
ESA coastal and island states are economically dependent, while at the
same time preserving the sovereignty of ESA states to negotiate national
access agreements with the EU.
The overarching objective of the ESA FFA, the
communiqué says, is to promote effective conservation and management, an
essential prerequisite for the sustainable development of the living
marine resource in the EEZ and Territorial Sea (relevant jurisdiction)
of ESA States, for the mutual social and economic benefit of the ESA
group of countries and EU.
The FFA will not replace the current bilateral
agreement with the European Union but rather should be seen as being a
minimum set of conditions within which a fisheries agreement on access
to fish stocks in each Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) will be negotiated
by each country, says the communiqué.
Each country has access to different types of fish
stocks. For example, Seychelles, Comoros and Mauritius are mainly
concerned with access to tuna; Madagascar has a tuna fishing industry
based on mainly foreign trawlers but also has a large shrimp industry;
Eritrea exports mainly small pelagic (sardines, anchovies and Indian
Mackerel), soft-bottom demersals (lizard fish and threadfin bream) and
reef-based demersals (snappers, groupers, etc.); and Kenya, having a
largely artisanal fishing industry fishing on the shelf area close to
shore catching reef-based demersals and small pelagic species.
There is a large variation in the way fish are
exploited in the different ESA countries. In the EEZs of Seychelles,
Comoros and Mauritius fishing is mainly for tuna by industrial fleets of
purse-seiners and long-liners; in Madagascar more than half the
production of shrimps and prawns are farmed; and in Eritrea and Kenya
most fishing is done by the artisanal sector, although there is an
increase in the number of trawlers active in the territorial waters of
both countries. This means that the FFA needs to be broad in scope to
take account of the different requirements of the different ESA EPA
countries and the ESA FFA should make a clear distinction between
multi-species agreements and tuna agreements because of their different
specificities.
According to the communiqué, the preservation and
particular needs of the artisanal/subsistence fisheries will be given
due recognisance in the framework agreement.
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