
Komodo Watch
October
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Environmental News Network
Tuesday,
November 7, 2000
Blast fishing ring busted in
Indonesia by John Ryan
After a dramatic boat chase late
Sunday through the reef-studded waters of Indonesia's Komodo National Park,
police and park rangers arrested 24 fishermen caught in the act of bombing
coral reefs in the area. The fish bombing bust marks the first arrest this
year in the Komodo area, one of the few regions of Indonesia where fish bombing
is monitored with any regularity.
Fish bombing, or "blast fishing," is
a common, though illegal, practice in Indonesia, a nation of 17,000 islands
surrounded by coral reefs. Many marine experts consider bombing the greatest
threat to the archipelago's reefs, home to 25 percent of the world's fish
species. Despite the ban on blast fishing, such arrests are rare in Indonesia.
Even where laws against such destructive fishing practices are enforced,
fish bombers can quickly throw their bombs and other evidence overboard when
they see police approach.
Authorities arrested the 24 fishermen,
including 11 teen-age boys, near Siaba Island in the northeastern part of
the national park. Police also confiscated three dilapidated wooden boats.
A fourth boatload of fishermen escaped, according to Romi Akbar of the Indonesian
Forestry Police who commands the "floating ranger station" patrol.
Akbar said patrollers first heard a bomb explode near Siaba Island, then
saw a second bomb send a plume of foam skyward, at which point they gave
chase. After firing a series of shots into the air, the police finally detained
the fishermen shortly before dusk Sunday. The arrested fishermen hail from
Papagaran, a small village inside park boundaries, and Misa and Bajo Barat,
two villages near Komodo.
Monday morning, a truck delivered
10 of the suspects from police headquarters in the port town of Labuanbajo
to the dock where the seized boats lay. The fishermen were publicly shamed
as a crowd of locals and idle law enforcement officials looked on. Stripped
to the waist to identify them as prisoners, the fishermen were forced to
walk on their haunches, hands behind their heads, while repeating the words "Saya
melakukan bom," or "I use bombs." They then hauled evidence
from their boats to the truck: three "hookah" air compressors used
by the divers who gather dead fish in the wake of each explosion and thousands
of limp, broken-boned fish. Police then escorted the suspects back to the
police station, where they remain in custody.
Komodo National Park has better
enforcement than most marine parks after its reef patrol program took effect
in 1996. Dive operators working in the area and the Nature Conservancy's
Indonesia Programme contributed funds to buy a boat to bolster park patrols
against fish bombing, cyanide squirting and other destructive fishing practices.
The Nature Conservancy estimates
that the patrols " a joint effort between park rangers, police and the
Indonesian army " have reduced fish bombing in the park by 80 percent.
The conservancy and other non-governmental organizations are also working
to provide economic alternatives to destructive fishing in the vicinity of
the park.
Famous for its dragons, Komodo
is also the site of some of Indonesia's " and the world's " richest
marine habitat. The park alone is home to nearly 1,000 species of fish as
well as 250 species of reef-building corals.
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Komodo National Park
Balai Taman Nasional Komodo
Labuanbajo, Flores NTT Indonesia
Tel: 62.358.41004, 41005
Fax: 62.385.41006
E-mail : tnkomodo@indosat.net.id
The official website of The Komodo National Park: www.komodonationalpark.org
Copyright ©1999-2002 The Komodo Foundation. All Rights Reserved.
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