Google – AFP, 10 November 2013
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A worker
packs shark fins with salt in Kesennuma city, Japan, on March 12,
2013
(AFP/File, Toshifumi Kitamura)
|
Wellington
— New Zealand is to ban shark finning in its waters within two years, Primary
Industries Minister Nathan Guy announced Sunday.
It is
already illegal in New Zealand to slice the fin off a shark and throw it back
alive, and Guy said the new ban would be extended to finning a shark and
dumping the carcass at sea.
It will
start to take effect in some areas next October and cover all New Zealand
waters by 2016.
"The
practise of finning sharks is inconsistent with New Zealand's reputation as one
of the best managed and conserved fisheries in the world," he said.
Conservation
Minister Nick Smith said New Zealand's attitude to sharks "has come a long
way since the 'Jaws' days of the only good shark being a dead shark".
"This
ban on finning is an important step towards improving shark conservation,"
he added.
New Zealand
has 113 species of sharks of which seven are already protected including great
whites, the whale shark and the basking shark.
According
to the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, shark stocks are being decimated
with about 100 million killed globally each year, mostly for their fins which
are a sought after delicacy in Asia.
They are
used in the lucrative shark fin soup market as well as in the production of
many traditional medicines.

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