The Yin Yuan was spotted by a Canadian aircraft hosting Japanese observers. It was seized by the Honolulu-based US cutter Morgenthau, which was carrying two Chinese law enforcement officials.
"All these countries are affected by illegal activities," said a Coast Guard spokesman yesterday, Petty Officer 2nd Class Grant DeVuyst.
High seas drift net fishing kills huge amounts of fish, birds and marine mammals with nets suspended for miles. The practice is universally condemned, according to the Coast Guard, and is a significant threat to ecosystems.
The Morgenthau, a 378-foot high-endurance cutter, was patrolling the North Pacific in support of fisheries law enforcement and was carrying two officials from the China coast guard's Fisheries Law Enforcement Command.
The Morgenthau intercepted the Yin Yuan on May 27 about 1,005 kilometres east of Tokyo, near where it was first spotted from the air, DeVuyst said. The vessel's captain told a boarding team that the Yin Yuan was registered in China.
The vessel, according to the Coast Guard, used prohibited fishing gear, failed to maintain sufficient catch records and fished with no authorisation by a sanctioned authority. The Coast Guard also noted pollution problems.
The Morgenthau escorted the Yin Yuan more than 2,250 kilometres to a China coast guard vessel in the East China Sea.
