19 February 2006  By Pieter Tesch and Ed Micheau
Talks between EU officials and the west African state of Mauritania 
about Irish fishing rights broke down this weekend.

Atlantic Dawn, the supertrawler owned by Donegal man Kevin McHugh, was 
involved in a stand-off with Mauritania after being fined almost $100,000.

The fine was imposed last autumn after the Mauritanian navy boarded 
Atlantic Dawn for allegedly operating inside an exclusion zone. McHugh’s 
company rejects the allegation and claims that a number of European 
factory ships have been victims of increased piracy since a military 
coup in Mauritania last summer led to the creation of a junta government.
‘‘In September, the Atlantic Dawn was boarded by the Mauritanian 
Fisheries Patrol for the fifth time in a month,” said Niall O’Gorman, 
finance director at Atlantic Dawn, which runs the ship.

‘‘They demanded money and also huge quantities of fish.

“The captain refused. He was then notified that he was being detained 
for fishing inside the permitted limits. The captain denied the 
allegation, but the vessel was detained. We were not allowed to be 
present or represented at a hearing, where the vessel was fined.

‘‘The fine was the same as fines imposed on many, if not all, of the 
other large EU vessels working there. There is no due process or appeals 
procedure.”

Atlantic Dawn was withdrawn from the region and the company is waiting 
for the outcome of talks between EU negotiators and the Mauritanian 
government.

Speaking to The Sunday Business Post, the Mauritanian fisheries minister 
Sidi Mohamed Ould Sidina said Atlantic Dawn was not welcome in his 
country’s waters because of a history of alleged infringements. ‘‘The EU 
is stressing to introduce Atlantic Dawn to Mauritanian waters under a 
new fisheries agreement,” he said.

‘‘It is putting pressure on us to accept her in the EU fleet, but we 
don’t want her. Mauritania is also seeking a substantial increase in EU 
payments for the right of its vessels to fish in Mauritanian waters. It 
currently pays €84 million a year for the rights.”

O’Gorman said Atlantic Dawn would only return to the area under the 
protection of an EU agreement.

-- 
“Peace is not the absence of war. It is a virtue, a state of mind, a 
disposition for benevolence, confidence and justice”



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