February 13, 2004
Canada cancels fish
session with Greenland
Nunatsiaq News
Canada has cancelled its
annual meeting with Greenland to discuss fish quotas because of an incident
last December in which the Canadian Coast Guard nabbed a Greenlandic trawler
scooping up shrimp in an off-limits area near Newfoundland.
The meeting was scheduled
for mid-January in Nuuk, but at the last minute, Ottawa decided to cancel and
sent a letter to Greenland, requesting more information.
"Essentially, it was
not a legal activity. There had been a NAFO quota for Greenland, Denmark and
the Faroe Islands of 144 tonnes of shrimp," said Steve Outhouse, a spokesperson
for the federal department of Fisheries and Oceans in Ottawa. "These countries
had set a unilateral quota that was higher than that."
By cancelling the meeting,
Outhouse said Canada could "voice our displeasure with their unilateral
quota and being in an area they shouldn't be in."
"It's sort of the
first diplomatic volley toward them, and to ask them to please make assurances
that this won't happen again and to obtain an explanation as to how something
like this could happen after we were under the impression that everyone was
going to be playing by the same quotas and rules," Outhouse said.
Increasingly, Greenland
has come under fire from various groups for not following scientifically recommended
quotas and for not setting or enforcing quotas, particularly with respect to
the harvest of migratory birds, marine mammals, crabs and scallops. The home
rule government's attempts to place and enforce limits and encourage Uppik,
a Greenlandic environmental protection group, haven't succeeded in altering
public opinion or action.
Within Greenland, hunters
and fishermen complain about restrictions and the negative feedback they hear.
"We are tired of those
condescending opinions about hunters, ever since ... Uppik, was created,"
Pavia Nielsen, a hunter from Uummannaq, recently told Greenland television.
But Greenland's persistence
in what many consider to be over-fishing could lead to other measures than criticism
if its officials don't answer Canada's letter.
"When you start this
process and you don't get a response back and a commitment to work within the
rules, then we can close our ports and it becomes an economic hardship to the
country," Outhouse said.
Last year, this tactic,
said Outhouse, was previously used successfully against the Faroe Islands.
Deep sea shrimps are Greenland's
most lucrative catch, bringing in about $350 million in 1998, around two-thirds
of its total export income.
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