Online Reporter
THE Government, through the Ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Rural Development, is pushing for a minimum 10-year jail sentence for those convicted of stealing from fisheries.
The offence is currently classified as ordinary theft, but rising cases have prompted authorities to push for a more punitive sentence that is equivalent to stock theft.
Director in the Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture Resources in the Ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Rural Development, Mr Milton Makumbe, said guidelines for the proposed sentence are currently under consideration by the Ministry of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs.
“Cases of fish theft are on the rise and this is negatively affecting our progress, especially on the Presidential Fisheries Scheme, which seeks to transform rural communities and schools,” he said.
“We met with stakeholders for the fisheries and aquaculture policy review and agreed that stealing fish is a serious offence.
“A jail term of 10 years will be deterrent enough to stop such behaviour. Theft sabotages Government programmes and has to be treated with the seriousness it deserves,” said Mr Makumbe.
Meanwhile, Government has restocked Chinorumba High School fishponds with 4 200 tilapia fingerlings after the school’s fish worth US$3 000 were stolen.




