Serious incident on fishing vessel confirms fears

A serious injury to a Government fisheries observer shows the clean up of the fishing industry is not moving fast enough.

A seri­ous injury to a Gov­ern­ment fish­eries observ­er shows the clean up of the fish­ing indus­try is not mov­ing fast enough.

Fish­eries observ­er Mar­tin Bow­ers had his arm yanked from its sock­et and his fore­arm muti­lat­ed when his life­jack­et became snagged on a con­vey­or belt on a Kore­an fish­ing ves­sel south of Bluff on Fri­day night.

He is now recov­er­ing after being winched from the ves­sel by a res­cue heli­copter and hav­ing his arm ampu­tat­ed below the elbow at Dunedin Hos­pi­tal.

The Gov­ern­ment announced in 2012 that joint ven­ture for­eign fish­ing ves­sels would have to be reflagged to the New Zealand flag by 2016, bring­ing them under New Zealand health and safe­ty reg­u­la­tions.

Mar­itime Union of New Zealand Nation­al Sec­re­tary Joe Fleet­wood says the inci­dent rein­forces the view of the Union that any fur­ther delays in reflag­ging are putting crews and observers at risk through con­di­tions on some ves­sels.

“The reflag­ging of these joint ven­ture ves­sels is not going to hap­pen until 2016 which we have said from the begin­ning is too long and too soft on the oper­a­tors.”

“It is like­ly that anoth­er seri­ous inci­dent will occur in this time­frame based on the his­to­ry of the indus­try.”

He says the reflag­ging should hap­pen by the end of this year at the lat­est as seri­ous inci­dents and harm were still occur­ring.

Mr Fleet­wood says the Sur Este 700 has already been in the news after it struck rocks and spilled diesel fuel near Stew­art Island in April 2013, requir­ing an expen­sive sur­veil­lance oper­a­tion.

A sis­ter ves­sel, the Sur Este 707, was raid­ed by Gov­ern­ment agen­cies in Timaru in Feb­ru­ary 2013. Offi­cers from Immi­gra­tion New Zealand, the Labour Inspec­torate and rep­re­sen­ta­tives from oth­er agen­cies, includ­ing the police and Mar­itime New Zealand vis­it­ed the Sur Este 707.

In a state­ment, MBIE said their inves­ti­ga­tion fol­lowed infor­ma­tion pro­vid­ed by a gov­ern­ment fish­ery observ­er who not­ed pos­si­ble issues with ves­sel safe­ty, exces­sive hours of crew work and fal­si­fi­ca­tion of crew time records.

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