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Quad team up to track 'dark shipping' and illegal fishing in the Indo-Pacific

The US-led Quad group will launch a new initiative to track "dark shipping" and monitor illegal fishing in the Indo-Pacific, as the four countries step up efforts to counter China's influence in the region.

The White House said on Tuesday that the Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness aimed to build "a faster, wider, and more accurate maritime picture of near-real-time activities in partners' waters".

Over the next five years, the Quad members - the United States, Japan, Australia and India - will share unclassified data gathered by a combination of Automatic Identification System signals from ships and radio-frequency technologies.

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"This initiative will transform the ability of partners in the Pacific Islands, Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean region to fully monitor the waters on their shores and, in turn, to uphold a free and open Indo Pacific," the White House said.

The system will connect existing surveillance centres, including two in India and Singapore, as well as the Pacific Islands Forum Fisheries Agency in the Solomon Islands and the Pacific Fusion Centre in Vanuatu. The latter two are backed by Australia.

The partnership was announced as leaders of the Quad security grouping met for their second in-person summit in Tokyo, where they also pledged to further cooperate on areas ranging from coronavirus vaccines to infrastructure, climate change and cybersecurity.

Dark ships are vessels that turn off their AIS transponders to hide their location and identities, usually to conceal activities such as illegal fishing or unauthorised entry into another country's waters.

China's fishing fleet, which includes privately owned vessels and commercial trawlers from state-owned companies, has been travelling further afield, seeking new fishing grounds in Southeast Asia, West Africa, South America and in the South Pacific as result of depleted fish stocks in Chinese waters.

But Chinese fleets have often been accused of defying international law to carry out illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, using prohibited equipment, capturing protected species such as turtles and seals and abusing migrant crews, according to a recent report by the Environmental Justice Foundation.

In Beijing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said China had "always actively fulfilled its international obligations".