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Four fishermen in trouble for disobeying regulation on closed season 

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Four fishermen have been convicted at the TDC District Court in Tema for flouting the close-season fishing imposed by the Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development. 

The four; Kennedy Ganavudo, 22, Francis Bobole, 20, Jonas Ametepe Kushi, 35 and Kobla Abotse, 46, were fined a total of 19,200 cedis or in default serve a one-month jail term. 

The Magistrate, Benedicta Antwi slapped the sentence on the four after hearing the brief facts of the case.

The court further ordered the Police to confiscate the catch found in their possession as well as their fishing equipment. Three out of the four convicted persons pleaded guilty, while one Francis Bobole, pleaded guilty with explanation. 

He told the Court that they had traveled to Togo on a fishing expedition but due to the bad weather conditions, they did not realize they had strayed into Ghana waters where the close season was in force at the time of their arrest.

The facts, as narrated in Court by Inspector Hilda Sarkodie, was that on July 25, about 4 pm, joint personnel of the Fisheries Enforcement Unit, comprising of officers from the Monitoring Control Surveillance Division and officers from the Marine Police on board a Ghana Navy vessel embarked on patrol on the seas to track down fishermen failing to observe the close season which started on July 1, 2023. 

She said in the process, the four fishermen were arrested in two separate canoes fishing, contrary to section 84 of the Fisheries Act 625, while an unspecified quantity of fish were also found in their possession on the canoes. 

The Prosecution said the four fishermen were handed over to the police and after investigations were charged with the offence and arraigned. The Court after hearing from the prosecution that the convicts were first-time offenders imposed a fine of 400 penalty units on each of the four fishers.  

The close season was implemented by the Minister of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development in collaboration with the Fisheries Commission and other stakeholders in accordance with section 84 of the Fisheries Act 625. The Act seeks to, among other objectives; allow replenishment of the country’s overexploited and depleted fish stocks as it is the favourable period for fishes to reproduce.

This year, canoe and inshore fishers were expected to observe the closed season from July 1 to 31, while industrial trawlers were to observe the closed season from July 1 to August 31.

The Court after hearing the explanation returned a plea of guilty as the explanation did not raise any reasonable defence.

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