Showing posts with label killing sharks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label killing sharks. Show all posts

July 23, 2008

SPEARFISHING (Facebook diving group)


Common Interest - Activities
Description:
Speafishing isn't just a sport,
it's an addiction!

WE ARE NOW THE LARGEST SPEARFISHING GROUP ON FACEBOOK

Admins
Sal DeCarli (C. Connecticut)
(creator)

Officers:
Sal DeCarli (C. Connecticut)
Grand Pu'ba

912 memmers


GALLLERY OF SPEARFISHING







Spearfishing going mad (Facebook diving group)



Spearfishing goning MAD
Sports & Recreation - Water Sports
Description:
spearfishing , diving , freediving group
the group is a proparty of the MAKOs of the red sea team
Contact Info:
Email: eng_murhaf_ashi@hotmail.com
Location:
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

272 Members

Murhaf Ashi (Saudi Arabia)
(creator)


Officers:
* Murhaf Ashi (Saudi Arabia)
Mako team leader
* Tamer K. Aburamadan (Saudi Arabia)
PADI captin
* Abdullah Nasser
Mako member class A
* Mulham Ashi (Saudi Arabia)
mako member class A +
* Faisal F. AlAmoudi
Mako member
* Loai Felemban
Mako member

GALLERY OF THIS GROUP:


DIVERS FACEBOOK GROUPS ALERT (shark killing photos)







jeddah divers facebook group
exposing how fun is for them to kill Sharks








A Fucking TIGER SHARK, it is such a dangerous one, cought a similar one at a fishing tournament at 2002, was 3 1/2 meter long , we won
Added August 4, 2006

Added by Bee Kay
to the group "jeddah divers"
from the album ""Fishing trip in the Red Sea""








thats the Big boy for that trip
In this photo: White Tip Shark
Added March 5, 2006
Added by Bee Kay
to the group "jeddah divers"
from the album ""Fishing trip in the Red Sea""

July 22, 2008

DURBAN, THREE NON-AGGRESIVE ADULT TIGER SHARKS KILLED BY A FISHERMAN


These majestic animals are a massive eco-tourist attraction in the area and killing them can be compared to the slaughter of lions – a tragic loss of one of nature's awesome creations.
Tiger sharks have limited protection in the Marine Protected Area (MPA) of Aliwal Shoal where divers from around the world come to see them. Although the fisherman claims he caught the sharks outside the MPA (he was seen earlier that day fishing within the MPA area), he landed them in the MPA, which is against the law. As a result of eye witness reports, followed by public outcry, the fisherman is in the process of being charged.

It is suspected that a further five Tiger sharks were killed previously this year. This is a serious blow as dive operators report identifying only about 20 to 30 different large Tiger sharks during a season.

South Africa is considered a shark diving Mecca of the world and Aliwal Shoal is one of the shark diving hotspots of the country. Every year thousands of tourists come to South Africa to have a unique diving experience with some of the oceans top predators. This eco-tourist industry brings in millions of rands of revenue, and provides job opportunities in a country with a high unemployment rate.

It is estimated that Tiger shark diving in Aliwal Shoal generated over R18 million (USA$2,5 million) during 2007, while White shark cage diving in Gansbaai alone generates approximately R289 million per annum (USA$40 million). One Ragged-tooth shark is estimated to be worth R50 000 per annum (USA$7 000) and can live for 40 years or more. In its lifetime it is therefore worth approximately R2 250 000 (USA$310 000). This same shark if slaughtered will fetch only R1 000 once off (USA$140 – shark meat, depending on size and species, is worth only between R3-R18 per kilogram – USA$40c-2,5). Quite evidently the socio-economic value of a live shark far outweighs the value of a dead shark and the loss of any one of these species will therefore have severe impacts.

Despite this, of the over 200 different species of shark found in South African waters, only White sharks, Whale sharks and Basking sharks are fully protected. All other species may be legally caught and killed. Ragged-tooth sharks, Tiger sharks and Bull sharks have limited protection within MPAs. This limited protection of so few species is of little help since these animals know no boundaries and therefore remain vulnerable outside MPAs. Added to this, this protection is of little use when the existing laws are not adequately enforced.
The South African government owes it to its citizens, the world and future generations to protect its natural resources, as well as to support the lucrative and high profile shark ecotourism industry, including those who depend upon it for their livelihood.

  • We therefore demand that the Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Mr. Marthinus Van Schalkwyk, ensures that Marine and Coastal Management (MCM) immediately improves protection of the following sharks of high eco-tourist value in the following ways:
  • Tiger sharks, Ragged-tooth sharks, Bull sharks and Cow sharks may not, under any circumstances, recreational or commercial, be slaughtered and if caught they must be released – this protection is to apply not only in all MPAs but in all South African waters;
  • Hammerhead sharks are given MPA protection (they may not be caught or landed in all MPAs);
  • Blacktip sharks, Bronze whaler sharks and Dusky sharks are given protection within the Aliwal Shoal MPA (they may not be caught or landed in the Aliwal Shoal MPA)
  • Scientific research is implemented in order to set sustainable quotas that will ensure the conservation of the Blacktip shark, Bronze whaler shark and Dusky shark, added to this;
  • The Demersal Longline Fishery may never be allowed to extend beyond East London in order to restrict catches of the Blacktip shark, Bronze whaler shark and Dusky shark;
  • Drumlines, or any similar baited device that aims to target, catch and/or kill any large shark are declared illegal fishing devices throughout South African waters;
  • MCM's compliance department immediately launches tangible measures to adequately enforce laws for currently protected shark species both in and out of MPAs.
How to support this petition
We cannot wait for government to do something – it will simply be too late. We therefore implore you to help us save our sharks. Our power collectively must not be underestimated if we are to ensure the survival of the rest of our Tiger shark population as well as that of other species we are privileged to still be seeing in our oceans. If you support this petition then please take the following simple steps – your signature will help:
  1. You can either log onto www.aoca.org.za and go to the petition link in the navigation bar and follow the instructions
  2. Alternatively you can email AOCA directly at info@aoca.org.za and write your own comments. Be sure to write in the subject line: Support of AOCA Petition for Protection of SA Sharks.
    This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
Diving is all about the freedom to go just about anywhere, whenever you please. Sadly, legislation is threatening that freedom, but divers can halt this banning by just having a say in things.

June 13, 2008

SHARK FINNING IN GALAPAGOS ISLAND, SHAME OR STUPIDITY ???


Either it be incidentally, arbitrarily, legal or illegally, the number continues being the same: one hundred million sharks killed every year in the planet. And it also happens in Galápagos!

I have not read about it, no one told me about it; I saw it with my own eyes, I personally gathered the net to take the photo for this article. It was difficult for me to raise it because on it, in it, and through it, hundreds of inert creatures were hanging, trapped. I was following the instructions of Franklin Guaranda, who was trying to obtain the necessary evidence to report to the Galápagos National Park. “Raise the net more”, “Hold it high and don’t move it”, “Twist it a little towards the light”, “Hurry it seems that the fishermen are coming”.

Disciplined as I am, held my breath and my tears. Never in my life had I seen a shark caught in a fishing net. A small black fin shark, like a little rubber fish, constituted a great part of the weight that I held under my arms.

With the Zodiac we traveled the approximately three hundred meters of net, from one end to the other, both tied to the beach, taking photographs and video. We saw at least three rays caught, agonizing, four inert sharks and, by of course dozens of Mullets also known in Ecuador as Lisas (Mugil sp.) which are the primary target of this type of fishing.

At six thirty in the morning, our passengers were at the top of Bartolomé Island, one of the most visited sites of the islands. From its height of one hundred and fifteen meters, they contemplate the sun illuminating San Salvador to the west, Santa Cruz in the distance, the north beach of Bartolomé with its golden half moon form and to the south… in the south beach… a circle of death, in broad day light.

The guides call to the boat. Giancarlo Toti, Graciela Cevallos, Walter Perez insist on the radio. Even as they are seeing it, they can’t believe it. The captain, Juan Robalino, authorizes a Zodiac, and with camera in hand, our only weapon and instrument of work, we rushed to the reported place. I have lived something similar in two previous occasions. I knew I was at risk of being insulted, as it has happened before, that we would have to be fast in case the fishermen became aggressive, and that we had to protect the camera. But everything came to pass very “civilized”, if the term fits.


Ashamed?
  1. When the fishermen saw us arrive, they got into their boat and they went to the beach, to gather the net. They watched us, we watched them, we were very close to them, always with our camera in hand, but neither they nor we said a word. I want to think that with their silence they let us know that yes, they were ashamed, if not by the slaughter, then by their stupidity of having done this at this place.
  2. it is not allowed to fish in a tourist area, and
  3. No one is allowed to disembark on the beach, and the net was secured in each one its ends to dunes where marine turtles nest, one of the men ran stepping on who knows how many nests while he untied the net. Within the circle, in the water, there were turtles and at least five sea lions that were trapped and could not go anywhere, in addition to pelicans and frigate birds that were waiting to participate of the easy feast.

From the stern of their boat, of not more than ten meters in length, a full net full of Mullet hung under the water. We did not want to board the empty boat since we were less than them, so we could not see if they had caught more small sharks, which according to the detraction of Decree 2130, if caught “incidentally” are allowed to be sold on the mainland.

We cannot deny that in fact they were using a gill net for fishing Mullet. But there are hundreds of areas opened to legally fish mullet. So:
  • Why fish in a tourist area which is known for its abundance of small shark, which in fact is the main attraction for the tourists here?
  • Were they just there for the Mullet?
  • Or were they hoping to “incidentally” catch some other small thing?
    That is outside our comprehension. We took photos, video and by all means, we called the Galapagos National Park immediately.

In less than two hours, a boat from the Park arrived at Bartolomé. The fishermen had gotten rid of all the evidence. But we counted on photos, video and our report was signed and ready. The fishing boat was taken to port with the personnel of the Marine Reserve Patrol of the Galápagos National Park and a member of Navy. There the legal procedures will be followed to impose the corresponding sanctions.

The South beach, on which our passengers walked to later that morning, was full of dead Mullet, and pelicans and frigate birds that were finally participating in their much awaited feast. One of the sharks “incidentally” killed was also beached. One of the one hundred million sharks that are killed every year in the world.

Either it be incidentally, arbitrarily, legal or illegally, the number continues being the same:
one hundred millions of SHARKS killed every year in the planet.
And it also happens in Galápagos!


Source:
By Paula Tagle
nalutagle@yahoo.com

DIVERS RAISE YOUR VOICES IN EVERY COUNTRY IN THE NAME OF OUR FLAG, TOWARDS SHARKS PRESERVATION.




Here a real cruelty called tournament:


Montauk Shark Tournament

Only days after congress passed the Shark Conservation Act of 2008, the slaughter of sharks is happening right here in our own backyard.
This weekend the Star Island Yacht Club Shark Tournament will take place in Montauk, NY.
The 2008 Annual Shark Tournament is being held June 12–14. This year's website boasts a prize pool of more that $1,000,000 the largest yet, which means that more sharks than ever are going to be killed. The greed and ignorance of the few will affect all of us.
Why must these types of actions always lead to the decimation of species before we stop the madness?





PLEASE HELP US AND HUNDREDS OF OTHERS IN PROTEST OF THE STAR ISLAND YACHT CLUB SHARK TOURNAMENT THIS WEEKEND.

Please bring your cameras and join Wendy Heller from DivePhotoGuide.com this Saturday and help cover this horrible event so that it can be broadcast to the world in efforts to create more awareness and help save our sharks. We will be working with major media to prevent this event from continuing next year.

You can also join the Humane Society rally to show your support Saturday June 14th from 4-5pm pm at the intersection of West Lake Drive and Star Island Drive, Montauk, NY. For more information on the rally, please contact Kathryn at kkullberg@humanesociety.org.
For details on Wendy's coverage location at the Shark Tournament pls. email Wendy or contact us at


718-748-0324.

We look forward to your support - this is more important for the ocean and for our futures than most people will ever know. We are causing irrepairable harm that will be felt for generations to come.

More info:

  • Humane Society on Shark Tournaments

  • Star Island Yacht Club Shark Tournament - Associated Press

  • Declaration, Manifesto for Immediate Worldwide Shark Conservation Actions

Dear members, buddies, don´t turn your back on this, I´m sure all of you know that Sharks are so important in the marine ecosystem, I don´t want to imagine our Oceans without them. Tell the world, friends, Media press, everyone so we can give our support.

LET´S SAY NO, STOP KILLING AND FILING POCKETS WITH SHARK FINNING COVERED LIKE A ROMAN AGE TOURNAMENT.


Lizbeth Maria Aguirre
I´M A DIVER
Creator

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=11692617157

June 11, 2008

TELEPHONIC INTERVIEW with ROB STEWART


Guayaquil, June 8 2008
By Larisa Cevallos
Ecuador

Larevista published today 4 pages about SHARKWATER documentary that exposes the multimillionaire business of the shark fins and promotes the defense of the escualos. Larisa Cevallos, our collaborator in Australia, saw this films that it was released the 15 of May there. Sharkwater is a documentary writing, directed and filmed by a young Canadian photographer. It is a personal trip, it says he, by the passion of its life. With a slowed down rate, it films sample submarine images of impressive beauty and moving imponencia. Powerful soundtrack endorses the force of the images and it puts the final intensity to him of hand of names like Aphex Twin, Portishead and wonderful Nina Simone able to stop the hairs to him until the most insensible a. The center topic: a denunciation. The shark fluttering consists of cutting the fins of escualo, alive, and giving back the body to the sea. This because its meat has a ridiculous value in relation with the fins, that are sold to astronomical prices to satisfy the demand of soup of shark fin, specially of the Asian markets.


Rob Stewart, director, producer and protagonist of Sharkwater, is Canadian, loving of the sea, photographer, biologist, is single 27 years old and its passion by the sharks has taken to document it the marine world from the 13, contributing for Canadian Wildlife Federation' s Magazines, BBC Wildlife, Discovery Chanel, ABC, and others. When Rob is it jeopardize with projects that involve submarine photography or shooting can happen up to 200 days to the year underneath the sea. What began as a romantic idea to show to the perfect harmony between the shark and the ocean became a tétrica visual description of which it happens with those animals after being undressed of its fins and being sent to the sea to die at heart. The documentary one took almost five years in being filmed and is a trip around fifteen countries, where the central subject is Island of the Coco, in Costa Rica, and the Galápagos islands. The 89 minutes that last happen flying and turn around the beauty and blue life of the deep one, facing the extinction of the shark, in charge of Mafias uncontrolled and insatiable of wealth. One of the founders of Greenpeace questions in the documentary one: “ What we left future generations? What will say of us… that we were Barbarians, predators? How we could not realize of which the resources are limited”. Sharkwater is being released in some countries. Hopefully that the chains of cinemas of Costa Rica and Ecuador also release it. He would be fantastic that schools and universities show it their students as case of study and imminent analysis in their process of learning. Paul Watson, defender of the more aggressive, active and effective life wild of the world for 30 years, has been saying: “If we cannot save the Galápagos islands, then démonos by overcome with the planet Earth”.




ABOUT US...

Photobucket








THE ENCHANTED GALAPAGOS ISLANDS

SHARKWATER THE FILM

Photobucket For filmmaker Rob Stewart, exploring sharks began as an underwater adventure. What it turned into was a beautiful and dangerous life journey into the balance of life on earth. Driven by passion fed from a lifelong fascination with sharks, Stewart debunks historical stereotypes and media depictions of sharks as bloodthirsty, man-eating monsters and reveals the reality of sharks as pillars in the evolution of the seas. Filmed in visually stunning, high definition video, Sharkwater takes you into the most shark rich waters of the world, exposing the exploitation and corruption surrounding the world's shark populations in the marine reserves of Cocos Island, Costa Rica and the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador. In an effort to protect sharks, Stewart teams up with renegade conservationist Paul Watson of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Their unbelievable adventure together starts with a battle between the Sea Shepherd and shark poachers in Guatemala, resulting in pirate boat rammings, gunboat chases, mafia espionage, corrupt court systems and attempted murder charges, forcing them to flee for their lives. Through it all, Stewart discovers these magnificent creatures have gone from predator to prey, and how despite surviving the earth's history of mass extinctions, they could easily be wiped out within a few years due to human greed. Stewart's remarkable journey of courage and determination changes from a mission to save the world's sharks, into a fight for his life, and that of humankind.