Dedi Seraphin, Vice Chair

Seraphin Dedi has recently retired from his long term position as the Executive Secretary of the Fisheries Committee for the West Central Gulf of Guinea (FCWC), a regional body for fisheries in West Africa consisting of six member states - Liberia, Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria. During his tenure, the FCWC developed into a significant regional coordination and harmonization body that supported member states in engaging with international processes such as the Global Record, Cape Town Agreement (CTA), and the Port State Measures Agreement (PSMA). As a result, all FCWC countries have became party to the PSMA, and four countries have signed the CTA.

Dedi has made his most significant contributions to regional progress in the MCS area. He facilitated the FCWC West Africa Task Force, which served as a regional information sharing and cooperation mechanism to combat IUU fishing. Under his leadership, the FCWC established the regional MCS Centre, initiated the regional fisheries joint patrol, and implemented the fisheries closed season in West Africa.

Since January 2023, Dedi has been back in Cote d’Ivoire, his home country. He has a mission to energize the management of improved landing points for artisanal fisheries value chain development

Recent Posts

President of the Republic of Mozambique oversees the Groundbreaking Ceremony for the SADC’s new MCS Centre

The official groundbreaking ceremony for the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Regional Fisheries...

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South Africa works to implement legal, safe and fair fisheries

A three-day workshop was held in South Africa, Cape Town on the 16-18...

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SIF announces commitment to work with the SADC MCSCC to develop the SADC Regional Register of Fishing Vessels by 2026.

Intending to tackle the scourge of IUU fishing and safeguard maritime security and...

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Forty-first Meeting of the SADC Technical Committee on Fisheries.

The 41st meeting of the Southern African Development Community (SADC), Technical Committee on...

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What impact are we having?

The Issues

One in four fish in Africa is caught illegally, this threatens the sustainability of fish stocks, damages the ecosystem and deprives governments of income and people of livelihoods.

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Our Approach

Creating change by informing policy and practice, our hands on experience and investigative work means we are often the first to spot new trends and find ways to challenge these.

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Our Initiatives

Illegal fishing is a complex issue that requires multifaceted responses. Stop Illegal Fishing are working with a range of organisations to bring about change.

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