Sipekne’katik fisherman’s protest dumping of lobster ‘not acceptable,’ chief says
October 30, 2021
Canada, New England
A Sipekne’katik First Nation fisherman who appears in a video showing him dumping crates of banded lobsters into Digby harbour has been rebuked by the band’s chief. In the video, Robert Syliboy objects to a new Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) compliance measure that marks the tail fins of lobster with a paper hole puncher. The hole punch aims to identify lobsters harvested under Indigenous food, social and ceremonial (FSC) licenses in St Mary’s Bay. The conditions of those licenses prevent the sale of the catch. In the video, Syliboy says DFO is harming the lobsters by punching holes in their tail fins. >click to read< 07:39
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Chief Mike Sack, Chris Cash, Department of Fisheries and Oceans, DFO, dumping banded lobsters, food social and ceremonial licenses, FSC licenses, hole punch, Lobster Institute at the University of Maine, Nova Scotia, Robert Syliboy, Sipekne’katik First Nation, St. Marys Bay, to identify lobsters harvested, V-shape notch in Maine
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