Abalone Poaching

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Re: Abalone Poaching

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Police make nine arrests as they raid abalone processing facilities in Cape Town
R20m worth of abalone seized from various illegal processing facilities
13 October 2021 - 16:23
Aron Hyman Reporter
A police-led operation in Cape Town resulted in nine people being arrested and R20m worth of abalone seized, as various facilities were raided. File photo


Raids on various illegal processing facilities across Cape Town on Tuesday led to the arrests of nine people and the seizure of more than R20m worth of abalone.

According to Hawks Western Cape spokesperson Zinzi Hani, the arrests were the result of an operation involving the Hawks' serious organised crime investigation team, members of the department of forestry, fisheries and the environment, police crime intelligence officers and the Overberg police’s K9 unit.


The team started their operation by pouncing on an illegal abalone processing facility in Welgemoed, Bellville. There they arrested two Chinese and two Zimbabwean nationals, aged between 24 and 27, who were found with dried abalone worth about R6.5m as well as abalone processing equipment.

The team proceeded to the industrial district of Stikland, also in Bellville, where they discovered a processing facility and seized more than R13m worth of abalone before arresting a Kenyan and Somali national, aged 23 and 30.

From there the operation moved on to its next target, a property in Parow, where they uncovered another processing facility with more abalone. They arrested two Chinese nationals and a Zimbabwean, aged between 25 and 26.

All nine will appear in the Bellville magistrate's court on Thursday.


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Abalone worth more than R20m was seized by authorities in Cape Town on Tuesday.
Image: Hawks

Abalone, or perlemoen, is a mollusc that lives in the sea around South Africa's south coast. The species is in rapid decline due to an insatiable demand in China for the product as a delicacy and a status symbol.

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Re: Abalone Poaching

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There must be a way to stop the abalone poachers 0=

Chinese all over the place. Even my tailor/dressmaker is Chinese =O: In Italy there are loads of Chinese and they are clever....good service, good prices \O


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Re: Abalone Poaching

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Abalone worth R2m seized in Cradock
15 October 2021 - 12:25
Iavan Pijoos Journalist



The abalone confiscated from the two vehicles is worth an estimated R2m.


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Image: Saps

The Cradock crime prevention unit confiscated 1.4 tons of abalone this week.

Police spokesperson Lariane Jonker said the unit's members were doing patrols on Wednesday when they spotted two suspicious bakkies in convoy en route through Cradock.


A white Ford Ranger bakkie was stopped and searched and officers discovered 783kg of frozen abalone, Jonker said.

A 37-year-old man was arrested.

Jonker said the occupants of a second bakkie, a Toyota Hilux, fled in the direction of Hofmeyr.

“After a high-speed chase the vehicle was found abandoned and locked in Hofmeyr, with an estimated ton of frozen de-shelled abalone.”

The abalone confiscated is worth about R2m.

The suspect is expected to appear in the Cradock magistrate’s court on Friday.

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Third abalone bust this week as taxi driver nabbed at Lebombo border post
By Staff Reporter - 15 October 2021 - 13:34
The abalone was packed in 21 boxes and weighed 460kg.


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Image: SA Revenue Service

Customs officials have seized dried abalone worth R1.6m hidden in the trailer of a taxi at the Lebombo border post in Mpumalanga.

The intention was to illegally import the abalone into SA from Mozambique, the SA Revenue Service (Sars) said on Friday.


The abalone was packed in 21 boxes and weighed 460kg.

The driver of the taxi is in police custody.

Sars commissioner Edward Kieswetter praised customs officers for their vigilance.

“Our customs officers are committed to making it hard and costly for smugglers and to protecting SA’s economy. Any attempt to use our country as a springboard for illicit activities will be fiercely resisted,” he said.

“In this case, the officers have demonstrated their commitment to preventing the illicit trade in protected and endangered species.”

This comes after police seized deshelled abalone worth R2m in Cradock on Wednesday and raids on illegal processing facilities across Cape Town on Tuesday led to the seizure of more than R20m worth of abalone.

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Re: Abalone Poaching

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Are there still abalones left? :evil: :evil: :evil:


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Re: Abalone Poaching

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Abalone valued at more than R600,000 seized in Eastern Cape
10 November 2021 - 09:17
Shonisani Tshikalange Reporter


Eastern Cape police say they are closing in on suspects and arrests are imminent after abalone valued at more than R600,000 was seized in two vehicles on the N2.

Provincial police spokesperson Sgt Majola Nkohli said a case of contravening the Marine Living Resources Act (illegal transporting of abalone) has been opened for investigation.

“On Tuesday at about 5am it is alleged a resident alerted the Humansdorp K9 police about suspicious people loading plastic bags into two vehicles, a red VW Polo and a blue Audi, at the beach in Pellsrus, Jeffreys Bay,” Nkohli said.

Nkohli said a K9 vehicle was dispatched immediately to monitor the N2 between Jeffreys Bay and Thornhill with the assistance of Thornhill police.

“Moments later, the two vehicles were spotted on the N2 and were pulled off the road. The occupants of both vehicles disembarked and ran to nearby bushes. A search was conducted, but the three suspects managed to escape. On searching the two vehicles, police found abalone estimated at more than R600,000,” said Nkohli.

Nkohli said the two vehicles were seized for further investigation.

Police have urged residents in coastal cities and towns to assist in protecting endangered marine life.

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Re: Abalone Poaching

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:evil:


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Re: Abalone Poaching

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Blast at Motherwell house blows the lid off illegal abalone processing facility
21 November 2021 - 14:25
Alex Patrick Reporter
A gas explosion at a house in the Eastern Cape revealed an illegal abalone drying room.


A gas explosion at a house in Motherwell in Nelson Mandela Bay in the Eastern Cape revealed a trove of poached abalone with an estimated street value of over R1m.

According to police the explosion took place on Friday. Officers arrived at about 9.50pm at the house in Ncwazi Street NU 7 where they discovered a drying facility.

“On arrival, the entire house except one room was gutted due to the explosion. On further investigation, fans, gas bottles and 2,227 units of abalone were found in the house.”

Police say the house was rented out about six months ago. No suspects were found on the scene.


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Abalone valued at more than R600,000 seized in Eastern Cape
Police have urged residents in coastal cities and towns to assist in protecting endangered marine life.


The Stock Theft and Endangered Species Unit in Kariega are investigating cases of malicious damage to property and operating an abalone processing establishment without a permit.

Nelson Mandela Bay district commissioner Brig Thandiswa Kupiso urged residents not to turn a blind eye to any suspicious activity in their neighbourhoods and instead to report it to the police.

“The operation of illegal activities such as this in residential areas can be detrimental and life threatening to innocent people. Homeowners renting their properties have the onus of visiting and inspecting their properties from time to time. We will not allow criminals to ply their illegal trade among law abiding citizens.”

The confiscated abalone was taken for storage by the Department of Sea Fisheries.

Police are appealing to anyone who can assist them in their investigation in tracing the suspects to contact officer Raymond Ley on 082 441 7985 or 041 996 3340.

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Re: Abalone Poaching

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No suspects were found on the scene
Not very surprising O**
urged residents not to turn a blind eye to any suspicious activity in their neighbourhoods and instead to report it to the police.
People don't want to have to do with the police and do not trust them anymore :no:


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Re: Abalone Poaching

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Sons of the Sea, a South African movie that dives into the complexity of poaching

By Marieke Norton | 01 Jan 2022

Sons of the Sea is beautifully filmed, with close-ups and lingering shots of the Atlantic, the Great African Seaforest and the fynbos-covered hills at the southern tip of Africa. The land and sea help determine what actions the characters take. Switching between them echoes the idea of salvation as ambiguous, preventing clear distinctions between who is good and who is bad.
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What does salvation look like? When a person lacks options, this may not be a straightforward judgement to make. Is salvation an unearned windfall, or doing what’s legal?

The award-winning South African film Sons of the Sea pivots on questions like these. It explores the moral universe of forced choices through the narrative of Mikhail and Gabriel, two brothers from Kalk Bay, a fishing village near Cape Town. Mikhail is the older brother and a small-time abalone poacher. Gabriel is set up as his opposite: he completed school, plans to study further, has a good job at a local hotel and is in a relationship with a responsible young woman. Mikhail lives life according to somewhat looser morals – associated here with active criminality.

When a foreigner dies in the hotel where he works, Gabriel finds a stash of dried and packaged abalone, an amount that represents a fortune if it can be sold successfully. The brothers steal the valuable marine snails, setting off the well-known crime movie spiral into uncontrolled events.

As a counterbalance to the brothers, we encounter Peterson, an official with the local government department that deals with marine resource extraction. We are given clues about Peterson to indicate a man in a desperate situation – a widower with a young son and problematic mother-in-law, financial troubles and an inherited ethos of living off the land. Without giving away the story, suffice it to say that the lucre of the abalone lures all three to a dramatic resolution.

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Abalone, or perlemoen (Haliotis midae), is a shellfish that was once abundant along South Africa’s Western Cape coast. Illegal extraction rose steeply in the 1990s, for a number of reasons. It is highly sought after as a delicacy and status symbol. This made it valuable to the established black marketeers who saw the newly democratised South Africa as an expansion opportunity.

A number of coastal communities were left disappointed by the fishing rights processes that they had been relying on to reverse a century and more of colonial and apartheid exclusion from the formal fishing sector. When it became clear to these communities that they would not gain access to fishing resources, many took to “protest fishing”. This opened the gap for more intentionally criminal elements.

While it has its roots in the idea that the sea belongs to the people of the Cape, the reality is that poaching is devastating these communities and the ecology on which they wish to base their livelihoods.

The complex poaching world

Sons of the Sea is beautifully filmed, with close-ups and lingering shots of the Atlantic, the Great African Seaforest and the fynbos-covered hills at the southern tip of Africa. The land and sea help determine what actions the characters take. Switching between them echoes the idea of salvation as ambiguous, preventing clear distinctions between who is good and who is bad.

When I talk to people about my research into marine resource law enforcement in the Western Cape, I often encounter two perspectives: a conviction that all illegal fishers are criminal poacher-gangsters; or that poaching is a noble response to the enduring legacy of colonial and apartheid exclusions of people of colour from the ocean space and resources. The reality is usually far less clear cut.

What I argue – in line with other work on different kinds of illegal resource extraction – is that the decision to poach is not a decision, but a destination on a journey that is often fraught with loss and exclusion. Many divers have died in rough seas or when trying to evade law enforcement. Unless you are the kingpin or the merchant, poaching is a dangerous choice which could see you dead, in jail or embroiled in gangsterism.

My research has repeatedly shown me that South Africa’s coastal communities are under-resourced to the point of precarity. The inter-generational cycle of poverty leaves one with few choices. The dithering by the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment on implementing policy for small fisheries means that poaching is often the only option. It is not simply a choice between legality and criminality, it is often between starving or not.

To stop poaching, communities must be nurtured – in some cases regenerated – to provide young men like Mikhail with options. In the film, he is not simply criminal – he is trapped by the legacy of exclusion that reserves the sea for others. As a young man of colour, who did not finish school, he is in a bracket that currently suffers from 40.2% unemployment. He has no hope of getting a legal fishing licence, or a regular job with prospects. So why would he turn away from the one thing that provides without taking?

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Roberto Kyle and Brendon Daniels. (Image: Indigenous Film Distribution)

We see this complexity of intention and motivation not only in the two brothers, but also in the character of Peterson. Woven throughout the backstories of these characters is loss of loved ones, lack of resources and the desperation to get out of the economic hardships that prevent their futures from being realised.

Choices and motivations

Sons of the Sea presents the shifting landscape that compels the characters to revisit their choices and motivations as events unfold. What is the right choice changes, and is never the same for two characters at once. Throughout the first part of the film, we see Gabriel practising a speech under his breath, checking his notes as he prepares for this future in which he is centre stage, being listened to. He drops it, and Peterson finds it at the scene of the crime. As he reads it, so do we as the audience:

It is clearly intended as the central idea of the film. This is vital, as the fight against poaching is a misnomer. The only constructive, longterm counter to illegal fishing and the abalone black market is a world in which young people are not preoccupied with salvation, with saving themselves, but one in which they do not need saving. DM

This article was first published by The Conversation

Marieke Norton, Lecturer, Course Convenor and Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Cape Town


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Trio of Cape Town abalone poachers fined R100,000 each
22 January 2022 - 09:28
Philani Nombembe Journalist
Three abalone poachers arrested for running an illegal processing facility have been fined R100,000 each.


Image
Image: Hawks

Three abalone poachers have been fined R100,000 each after they were bust for running an illegal processing facility in Cape Town.

Two Chinese nationals — Wu Jieyong, 22, and Ren Keng, 27 — and Zimbabwean Justice Jairo Moyo, 27, were convicted in the Parow magistrate's court on Thursday.

The men were arrested in October by a team comprising the Hawks’ serious organised crime investigation team, crime intelligence, CapeNature and department of forestry, fisheries and environmental affairs.

This followed a tipoff that they were operating an abalone processing facility in Parow East. They all pleaded guilty to multiple charges of possession of illegal abalone.

“They were consequently found guilty on all charges and were ordered to each pay R100,000 into the criminal asset recovery account with an alternative three months' imprisonment wholly suspended for five years with conditions,” said Hawks spokesperson Zinzi Hani.

“They were sentenced to two years’ imprisonment, wholly suspended for five years, for selling, receiving or possession of illegal abalone. and a further three years’ imprisonment, wholly suspended for five years, for operating an illegal abalone-processing establishment.”

The court slapped the men with another two years behind bars, which was wholly suspended for five years, for transporting or possessing abalone “not in a whole state”.


The trio was sentenced to a further two years in jail, also wholly suspended for five years, for selling, delivering or acquiring of abalone without a prescribed invoice.

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