Kodiak-based Coast Guard intercepts illegal Chinese fishing vessel

A USCGC Alex Haley boarding team boards the fishing vessel Run Da after the vessel was suspected of illegal high seas driftnet fishing in the North Pacific Ocean, 860 miles east of Hokkaido, Japan, June 16, 2018. (Photo courtesy of U.S. Coast Guard)
A USCGC Alex Haley boarding team boards the fishing vessel Run Da after the vessel was suspected of illegal high seas driftnet fishing in the North Pacific Ocean, 860 miles east of Hokkaido, Japan, June 16, 2018. (Photo courtesy of U.S. Coast Guard)

An illegal fishing vessel was intercepted off the coast of Japan with 80 tons of chum salmon and one ton of squid onboard.

“Legally, they can go up to about two-and-half kilometers. This vessel had almost five times the legal limit of nets,” said Captain Darran McLenon, chief of response for the 17th Coast Guard District.

He says the captain of the vessel Run Da admitted to fishing with driftnets up to 5.6 miles in length.

The crew of the Kodiak-based cutter Alex Haley detained the 164-foot Chinese-flagged fishing vessel with 29 crew onboard June 16. McLenon said they apprehended the vessel in international waters 860 miles east of Hokkaido, Japan.

He says they couldn’t have done it without help from the crew of a Kodiak-based C-130 aircraft which spotted the illegal fishing vessel.

“Because of them finding, detecting this, we were able to vector in the Coast Guard Cutter Alex Haley, which at the time was about 500 miles away and what they did was put boarding officers on board with Chinese ship riders,” McLenon said.

The joint international boarding was conducted in partnership with Chinese Coast Guard officers.

The vessel is suspected of violating the worldwide driftnet moratorium called for by the United Nations General Assembly.

The Run Da and its crew are being escorted back to China for prosecution. McLenon added that this is the first apprehension of a large-scale, high seas driftnet vessel since 2014.

KMXT - Kodiak

KMXT is our partner station in Kodiak. KTOO collaborates with partners across the state to cover important news and to share stories with our audiences.

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