Thunder (ụgbọ mmiri)

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FV Thunder bụ ụgbọ mmiri ịkụ azụ iwu na-akwadoghị nke mikpuru n'afọ 2015.[1] E wuru ụgbọ mmiri ahụ na 1969 na Norway ma nwee ọtụtụ aha, gụnyere: Vesturvón, Arctic Ranger, Rubin, Typhoon I, Kuko, na Wuhan N4.[1] The Thunder bụ akụkụ nke "Bandit 6", otu ụgbọ mmiri isii na-akụ azụ n'ụzọ iwu na-akwadoghị maka ezé eze Patagonia na Southern Ocean.  Ụgbọ mmiri ahụ bụ nke ikpeazụ debara aha na Lagos, Nigeria;  Otú ọ dị, ndị Naijiria wepụrụ aha ụgbọ mmiri ahụ n'akwụkwọ otu izu tupu ọ kpuo.[2]

N'oge ọ na-ada, ndị ọrụ ahụ nwere ndị Indonesia 30 na ndị ọrụ 10 si Spain, Chile, na Portugal, bụ ndị e nyefere n'aka ndị ọchịchị na São Tomé na Príncipe.[2] E mechara kpee ndị ọrụ nke ndị ọrụ ụgbọ mmiri ikpe ma mara ha ikpe maka ọtụtụ mmebi iwu na-akwadoghị ịkụ azụ.  A tụrụ onye isi ụgbọ mmiri ahụ, Luis Alfonso Rubio Cataldo nke Chile, mkpọrọ afọ atọ.  A mara onye isi injinia ụgbọ mmiri ahụ, Agustín Dosil Rey nke Spain, mkpọrọ afọ abụọ na ọnwa itoolu.  A tụrụ onye ọrụ ụgbọ mmiri nke abụọ, bụ́ Luis Miguel Pérez Fernández nke Spen, mkpọrọ afọ abụọ na ọnwa asatọ.  Ọnụ, a tara ha nchara ihe karịrị nde $17.[3] Interpol kwenyere na ụgbọ mmiri ahụ bụ akụkụ nke ụgbọ mmiri isii na-arụ ọrụ site na ụlọ ọrụ shell n'okpuru Vidal Armadores, ụlọ ọrụ dị na Spain.[3][4]

A tọhapụrụ ọkwa Interpol maka ụgbọ mmiri ahụ na 12 Eprel 2013. N'ọnwa Mee afọ 2014, ndị ọrụ Malaysia kwụsịrị Thunder maka igbu azụ n'ụzọ iwu na-akwadoghị; Otú ọ dị, ha hapụrụ ụgbọ mmiri ahụ ka ọ gaa mgbe a kwụrụ ụgwọ $ 90,000.[5] Site na Disemba 17, 2014, ruo Eprel 6, 2015, ụgbọ mmiri abụọ Sea Shepherd, <i id="mwLQ">Bob Barker</i> na <i id="mwLw">Sam Simon</i>, dị ka akụkụ nke "Operation Icefish," chụpụrụ ụgbọ mmiri Thunder nke na-agba ọsọ ruo kilomita 10,000 site na mmiri Antarctic ebe ọ na-egbu azụ n'ụzọ iwu na-akwadoghị maka Patagonian toothfish ruo ebe Thunder tụbara na mmiri São Tomé na Príncipe na[6] 19.[7][8] The ship was first intercepted on December 17, 2014, at 15, inside the CCAMLR (Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources) region of management while deploying illegal gillnets.[9]

Ịchụ Thunder were ụbọchị 110, na-emebi ihe ndekọ gara aga nke ụbọchị 21, nke ụgbọ mmiri ndị nche Australia Southern Supporter setịpụrụ na ịchụ Viarsa 1 na 2003.[5][10]

Edensibia[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Urbina. "A Renegade Trawler, Hunted for 10,000 Miles by Vigilantes", New York Times, 28 July 2015.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Drama at Sea (6 April 2015).
  3. 3.0 3.1 Urbina. "African Court Convicts Captain of Renegade Ship in Illegal Fishing Case", The New York Times, 12 October 2015.
  4. The Hunt for the Last Chilean Sea Bass Poachers.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Thunder gone under: The story of the world's longest maritime chase (16 April 2015).
  6. Operation Icefish. seashepherdglobal.org. Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Retrieved on July 28, 2015. “Illegal fishing operations will be documented, reported and confronted. They will be physically obstructed from deploying their illegal gillnets and unlawful fishing gear will be confiscated and destroyed.”
  7. Illegal fishing vessel, THUNDER update (New Zealand)' (link to PDF notice). interpol.int. Interpol (23 April 2015). Archived from the original on 6 February 2016. Retrieved on July 28, 2015. “This Purple Notice contains updated information on the fishing vessel Thunder which sank in the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of São Tomé and Príncipe.”
  8. Ian Urbina. "A Renegade Trawler, Hunted for 10,000 Miles by Vigilantes", The New York Times, July 28, 2015. Retrieved on July 28, 2015. “The Bob Barker and the Sam Simon, two ships owned by Sea Shepherd, an environmental group, pursued a fish-poaching trawler called the Thunder for 10,250 nautical miles.”
  9. Sea Shepherd Intercepts Toothfish Poachers in the Southern Ocean. seashepherdglobal.org. Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (December 18, 2015). Retrieved on July 28, 2015.
  10. Sea Shepherd breaks record for world's longest sea chase of a poaching vessel.