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Right to seize vessel a matter of debate

Canadian Press

OTTAWA--Canada is "stepping ahead" of international law by arresting a Spanish fishing trawler in international waters off Newfoundland, experts agree. Whether it can legally do so is another matter. "International law has to catch up with our actions," said Clyde Sanger, communications director at the North-South Institute, an Ottawa-based think-tank. "This has been done by other countries--actions have been taken and codefied later on. But Armand De Mestral, an international law professor at McGill University in Montreal, says the high-seas arrest of the Spanish trawler Estai is a clear violation of international law further compromised by Canada's conservation record. "Who are we to tell anybody to behave?" he said. "We've committed as many crimes against the fish as any Spaniard ever did. "Canada is basically making law by breaking it. To do that, you've got to have very clean hands. It's harder to convince the world of your bona fides if you're already as guilty as anybody else." Fisheries Minister Brian Tobin has cited the Coastal Fisheries Protection Act to back the arrest outside Canada's traditional jurisdiction. The year-old law has a clause allowing Canada to use its muscle beyond 200 nautical miles when it feels conservation of stocks is at stake. Canada is not the only country to enact such legislation. It is based on a part of the International Lw of the Sea convention, which says distant-water fishing fleets like Spain's must cooperate with coastal states in conserving and managing stocks that migrate in and out of territorial waters. Some Latin American countries have declared similar laws and Great Britain has actually extended its jurisdiction to include parts of its continental shelf outside 200 nautical miles. "I think that Canada has a very good position," said Evelyne Meltzer, a marine law consultant in Halifax. While international law does not provide for arrest and seizure in the high seas, she said, Canada could claim a "defence of necessity" on grounds that the fish stock is threatened by Spain's refusal to accept international quotas. (from the March 15, 1995 Vancouver Sun)


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