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Strengthening of IUU fishing combat required
The Party Central Committee’s Secretariat on April 10 directs the enhancement of the Party’s leadership over the fight against illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing and sustainably developing the fisheries sector.
Patrolling to inspect fishing boats at sea__Photo: VNA

The Party Central Committee’s Secretariat on April 10 directs the enhancement of the Party’s leadership over the fight against illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing and sustainably developing the fisheries sector.

The Directive, coded 32/CT-TW, signed by Permanent Member of the Secretariat Truong Thi Mai, highlights the fisheries sector’s development over the past years. It also notes that since 2017, all-level authorities, sectors, and the national steering committee for combating IUU fishing have exerted efforts to carry out policies and legal regulations, build systems for monitoring fishing vessels, and boost management, thus gradually reducing violations.

However, it points out that the sector has yet to secure truly sustainable development or fully comply with anti-IUU fishing regulations. As a result, the country hasn’t succeeded in having the European Commission (EC)’s “yellow card” warning over the issue removed.

The Secretariat underlines the main causes of current shortcomings and assigned some focal and urgent tasks to Party committees and organizations, administrations, the Vietnam Fatherland Front, and socio-political organizations so as to ramp up the fight against IUU fishing and ensure sustainable fisheries development.

It requires them to view the IUU fishing combat as an important, urgent, and also long-term task critical to sustainable fisheries development, as well as a responsibility of the entire political system and the whole society.

It asks for stepping up law dissemination and awareness-raising activities; effectively implementing the strategy for sustainably developing Vietnam’s maritime economy until 2030 with a vision to 2045, along with the plans, strategies, and programs related to the fisheries sector’s sustainable development and international integration; and quickly perfecting relevant policies and legal regulations.

Other tasks include paying due attention to the policies on aquaculture, fishery resources exploitation, protection and development, and export processing; supporting the modernization of the fisheries sector; improving livelihoods and vocational training for fishermen; and bettering the state management capacity.

The fisheries resources surveillance force and relevant agencies are required to enhance their capacity and sense of responsibility while examination, inspection, monitoring, law enforcement, and settlement of violations must be enhanced and public - private partnership in building fishery infrastructure should be encouraged and facilitated.- (VLLF)

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