|

MINISTER NOW RESPONSIBLE FOR FUTURE TRAWL KILLS
MEDIA RELEASE
28 February 2002
"The Commonwealth Minister for Environment and Heritage,
Dr. Kemp must now accept responsibility for all future trawl
by-catch incidents within the Great Barrier Reef Marine
Park." That was the message to Dr. Kemp from Sunfish
Deputy Chair and environmental coordinator, Vern Veitch.
" Dr. Kemp's office has refused all approaches to
allow other stakeholders to put forward their arguments
for a closure. He has effectively ignored Sunfish and it's
45 000 members. The commitment of the Commonwealth Government
on sustainable use of world heritage areas must now be questioned."
Mr. Veitch said. "They fiddle around the edges whilst
major issues continue to burn. They have ignored the views
of the majority." he said.
"By excluding Rockingham Bay from the trawl closure,
Dr. Kemp has endorsed the continued slaughter of thousands
of juvenile fish species before they get a chance to breed.
Unlike line caught fish that can be successfully returned
to the water alive, trawl caught fish are crushed and drowned
in the nets. Even by-catch reduction devices are only partly
effective by day and ineffective at night." Mr. Veitch
said.
Mr. Veitch said that this decision by Dr. Kemp had effectively
torpedoed the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority's
Representative Areas Program. "What chance has Dr.
Kemp and the Commonwealth Government got of closing off
up to 25% of all coastal waters to all types of fishing
when they cannot even exclude trawling which is recognised
globally as the most destructive form of fishing from a
small area such as Rockingham Bay. The representative Areas
Program is clearly dead in the water after this decision."
he said.
"Dr. Kemp has sent a clear signal that he does not
trust the advice he has received from GBRMPA which is clearly
nothing more than an aquaculture and tourism licensing office.
He should now consider winding back it's funding and putting
it to better use." Mr. Veitch said.
"Dr. Kemp has been conned by the commercial fishing
industry and it's supporters. He must now accept responsibility
for their ongoing impacts." Mr. Veitch said.
End of release.
|