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Azerbaijan: Poachers Out of Control

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  • Azerbaijan: Poachers Out of Control

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    Azerbaijan: Poachers Out of Control
    [03:05 pm] 19 May, 2007

    Use of explosives devastating rare Caspian fish
    stocks. When a south wind blows from the Caspian Sea
    towards the coastal village of Hovsan, 32 kilometres
    east of the Azerbaijani capital Baku, hundreds of dead
    fish are washed ashore.

    The fish are the victims of illegal poachers and
    indiscriminate methods of killing their prey that are
    threatening stocks of sturgeon, an endangered species
    and the most precious resource of the Caspian.

    In spring, all kinds of fish swim for shallow waters
    in order to spawn caviar in warmer waters. Here they
    fall prey to illegal explosives used by the poachers.

    Along the shoreline you can meet amateur fishermen
    with rods but also men who are evidently poachers
    getting ready to lay explosive charges.

    The ordinary fishermen say that for the last ten years
    poachers have been catching fish on this spot, mostly
    unhindered and using dynamite or home-made explosives
    made of fertilizers. They go out fishing in motorboats
    either early in the morning or late at night.

    Fishing is one of the most lucrative businesses in
    modern-day Azerbaijan. On the black market, a kilo of
    fresh sturgeon can be bought for 10 manats (12 US
    dollars) while a kilo of black caviar costs around 120
    manats (140 dollars). Overseas, these prices can be
    dozens of times higher.

    International alarm about a steep decline in sturgeon
    stocks prompted the international agency the
    Convention on International Trade in Endangered
    Species, CITES, to halt exports of Beluga caviar from
    the Caspian Sea in 2006.

    CITES lifted the ban in 2007, prompting objections
    from many environmentalists. One of them, Dr Ellen
    Pikitch, co-founder of the organisation Caviar Emptor,
    which monitors the caviar trade, called the decision a
    `death sentence', maintaining that the Beluga Sturgeon
    has lost more than 90 per cent of its population in
    recent years.

    The Caspian Fish Company has a monopoly over most
    fishing in the Azerbaijani sector of the sea, but it
    appears powerless to rein in the poachers.

    One of the poachers, who asked not to be named, told
    IWPR that one explosive charge is capable of causing
    an underground shock wave 15-20 metres in radius,
    which throws most of the dead fish to the surface.

    `The big heavy fish stay down below,' he said. `We get
    these fish out of the depths with the help of divers.'
    Others said it was rare to use divers and that most of
    the big dead fish come ashore within two or three
    days, creating a horrible pile of carcases on the
    beach.

    This is a crowded shoreline, home also to a number of
    summer houses for wealthy Baku residents, a special
    fishermen's zone, a bathing beach and 10-km-long
    oil-and-gas terminal, built in Soviet times 55 years
    ago.

    A local resident, who also declined to be named, said
    he had seen how the oil terminal, which extends into
    the sea, has also been damaged by the poachers'
    explosions and that it was now on the verge of
    collapse.

    A spokesman for the Azerbaijani oil company SOCAR
    declined to confirm this information to IWPR. He said
    the terminal was well guarded and it was impossible
    for strangers and especially for poachers to gain
    access to its territory.

    The amateur fisherman are also unhappy about the
    poachers in their midst.

    `Fishing is a recreation for us,' said 45-year-old
    Rizvan Makhmudov. `And when your line doesn't catch
    anything all the recreation has gone.'

    Makhmudov said he catches fewer and fewer fish and
    that the poachers are fishing stocks to the point of
    extinction in full view of witnesses.

    `Four or five people in motor boats drive up to Gum
    island where the amateur fisherman are fishing
    legally,' he said. `One of them chooses a place where
    there are a lot of fish, then the boat moves towards
    that spot at low speed. Then they light the wicks of
    specially prepared explosives in bottles and throw
    them in the water.'

    Makhmudov said that the blasts killed not just fish,
    but also other marine life, such as seals.

    Another amateur fisherman, 42-year-old Aydin Bairamov,
    said that he had seen illegal poaching take place in
    these parts since Soviet times. He said that a number
    of influential people who had summer houses here were
    now trying to fight the problem on their own
    initiative.

    One of these is a retired general, Rasul Rasumov, who
    is a former head of Azerbaijan's Police Academy - and
    also a keen fisherman. He tries to stop poachers
    wherever he can.

    But the efforts of individuals are no substitute for
    an official clampdown on poaching.

    Ehsan Zahidov, a spokesman for Azerbaijan's interior
    ministry, told IWPR his ministry did not play the
    leading role in fighting poachers and it was the job
    of the department for protection of biological
    resources in the environment ministry - although he
    added the police were ready to take part in joint
    operations if required.

    Gulshan Huseinova, press spokesman for the environment
    ministry, dismissed the charge that poachers were
    operating freely and said her ministry monitored the
    situation closely.

    `Because of strong winds we haven't been able recently
    to carry out raids in the open sea,' she said. `In the
    Neftchali and Salian regions our officers are
    constantly observing the situation. The information
    you are talking about has not been proved.'

    Environmentalists are especially worried about the way
    poachers target fish just as they are spawning.

    The area around the Shirvan canal that runs into the
    sea in the Salian region is another favourite fishing
    ground - and magnet for poachers. During the spawning
    season, different kinds of fish head from the sea for
    fresh water here. `If of course the nets of the
    poachers don't stop them from reproducing,' said
    47-year-old Jahangir Mirzoyev.

    Locals say the number of sturgeon here has fallen
    sharply. Ten km up the canal there are plenty of nets
    belonging to poachers. One of the men casting a net
    said that he paid a monthly bribe to officials to
    allow them to continue his trade.

    `If it keeps on like this our grandchildren won't know
    about these different kinds of fish,' said Mirzoyev
    bitterly.

    An environmental expert Telman Zeinalov, head of the
    non-governmental organisation the National Centre for
    Ecological Forecasting, said that by acting during the
    spawning season and using explosives, the poachers
    were destroying whole varieties of fish.

    `There is plenty of evidence of poaching and I have no
    doubts that the poachers are being protected by senior
    officials,' he said.

    By Sabuhi Nasirli in Hovsan and Neftchala (CRS No. 392
    17-May-07) Sabuhi Nasirli is a correspondent for
    Zerkalo newspaper in Baku.

    This article is a product of IWPR's Cross Caucasus
    Journalism Network, supported by the European Union.
    The article is republished from IWPR's Caucasus
    Reporting Servic
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