![]() Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, Jun 12, 2008 ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version |
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Kerala
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Kochi
KOCHI: Nearly 3,500 mechanised boats using trawls for fishing will be ‘shored’ for a month-and-a-half in Kerala as the annual ban on trawling during monsoon begins on June 14 midnight. The ban will end on July 31. Other fishing States along the Western Coast of the country — Karnataka, Goa, Maharashtra and Gujarat — will also follow the same ban schedule. Those on the Eastern Coast follow the April 15 to May 31 schedule. No mechanised vessel above 25 HP capacity will be allowed to fish during the ban period, though in Kerala, traditional fish workers using ‘valloms’ (with inboard engines of much higher capacity) are not restricted. The ban, an annual feature in Kerala since 1988, is aimed at facilitating unhindered breeding of fish during the rainy season. The trawls are believed to harm young fish en masse and hence the ban — though traditional fish workers and mechanised boat owners have differing views on the impact of the ban. The southwest monsoon period is the reproduction time of nearly 300 species of fish in the sea along the western coast. The ban is no longer applicable to the traditional fish workers as the Kerala Monsoon Fishery (Pelagic) Protection Bill 2007 exempted them last year. Over a lakh traditional fishermen stand to gain from the Act as it enables them to catch pelagic fish — such as oil sardine and mackerel — in the State’s territorial waters that stretch to 12 nautical miles. The Act was enacted to overcome the restrictions imposed by a Supreme Court directive. An order by the Supreme Court, on a petition by the Goa Environmental Foundation, had asked governments of coastal States to enforce a ban on trawling during the monsoon period by mechanised boats as well as fishing by country craft that used engines of more than 9.9 HP capacity. Since the huge majority of traditional fishermen with ‘valloms’ used inboard engines with a capacity much higher than the stipulated HP, they were deprived of their source of livelihood during the ban period. The ‘traditional fishermen’ are now not restricted by the size of the ‘valloms’ or the capacity of the inboard engines they use.
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