Treasury principal secretary Kamau Thuge when he appeared before the
Senate Financial Committee hearing issues surrounding taxes imposed by
county governments, among others, at the KICC in Nairobi on Tuesday.
Photo/Billy Mutai
By MATHIAS RINGA,
Coast leaders have called for the setting up of a
coast guard to help contain illegal fishing and smuggling of drugs into
the country through the Indian Ocean.
The move follows President Kenyatta announcement
on Monday that the country was losing fish worth Sh10 billion annually
to illegal fishing by foreigners.
Kilifi governor Amason Kingi said there was need
for the government, in collaboration with the five counties which border
the Indian Ocean, to form a coast guard to root out illegal activities.
“In a bid to address this menace, which might wipe
out our fisheries, it is important for the national government to
collaborate with coastal counties in forming a coast guard unit,” he
added. He warned that some marine fish species were threatened with
extinction owing to foreign trawlers which catch smaller fish and
discard them.
Low
Thousands of fishermen in Malindi, Watamu and
Mambrui experience low harvests due to the devastating effects of
illegal trawler fishing, he said.
Mr Kingi said that they had reported the illegal
activities to the Kenya Navy in vain as the officers claimed that
monitoring of fisheries was not in their jurisdiction. He said that
setting up a coast guard will also help contain an influx of hard drugs
through the sea.
“In order for the counties to combat drug
trafficking, we require a special unit to maintain surveillance in the
ocean,” he said.
“Our sea borders are porous and that is why drug
barons are taking advantage of the lapse to traffic drugs across the
coastline,” he said.
Speaking at Mombasa port on Monday, Mr Kingi called on his counterparts at the coast to support the move.
Mombasa deputy governor Hazel Katana backed the move saying that it would help address drug trafficking through the sea.
“Drug dealers find it easier to ferry their contraband cargo through the sea as security is minimal,” she said.
Ms Katana said that coastal counties were bearing
the brunt of the hard drug menace due to lack of sea patrols and
monitoring of illegal activities in the ocean.
Funds
But on Monday President Kenyatta assured Coast leaders that the government had set aside funds to buy a patrol vessel to combat illegal fishing and drug trafficking.
But on Monday President Kenyatta assured Coast leaders that the government had set aside funds to buy a patrol vessel to combat illegal fishing and drug trafficking.
He said that construction of the vessel was under way, adding that it would be commissioned soon.
No comments :
Post a Comment