MEPs ask for uniform fair treatment for EU fishermen  

Stqarrija 
 
 

Aqsam din il-paġna ma' ħaddieħor: 

EU fisheries rules should be applied uniformly to all EU fishermen, so that they are treated fairly, say MEPs in a resolution voted on Tuesday. Inspection procedures, e.g. for net mesh sizes and catches, should be standardized, as should penalties for infringements, it says. Introducing an EU “core curriculum” for training all fisheries inspectors, and using compatible real-time communication technologies EU wide, would also help improve fairness, it adds.

The non-legislative resolution, approved by 581 votes to 59, with 48 abstentions comes ahead of the upcoming revision of the Control System Council Regulation expected in 2017.


“The same legislation currently seems to be applied differently from country to country. This raises the question of how effective the legislation is and how credible the EU is. Legislation should apply to everybody and it is not acceptable that it does not apply equally to everyone”, said rapporteur Isabelle Thomas (S&D, FR).


Controls and sanctions


MEPs say huge differences in national control methods and disparities between inspection sites result in “discriminatory” controls, as some countries do checks at every stage, from fishing gear to the consumer’s plate, whereas others check only certain links in the chain. Sanctions also vary across the EU, as for the same infringement, an administrative penalty may be imposed in one country but a penal one in another.


Parliament recommends expanding checks to cover the entire production chain, assigning responsibility for control at sea to a single administrative body in each country so as to prevent overlaps, and standardising sanctions. MEPs say they prefer economic sanctions, including temporary suspensions of fishing activity, to penal ones.


Training and technologies

 

MEPs note that member states do not have the same training standards and call on the European Fisheries Control Agency (EFCA) and national training bodies to introduce a uniform European “core curriculum” for training fisheries inspectors.


New monitoring and real-time information transmission and communication technologies are essential for maritime surveillance and should be made technically compatible across all EU countries, says the text.

Procedure:  Non-legislative resolution

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