Neslisah 1
Neslisah 1
Ship Details
- IMO
- 8556287
- MMSI
- 271073348
- Call Sign
- TCA5434
- Gear
- Carrier
Crimes & Concerns
- Fishing*
The Neslisah 1 is directly associated with fishing concerns such as unauthorized transshipment. It is also linked to fishing concerns such as fishing in closed areas or during closed seasons and unauthorized transshipment.
View notes
- Fishing
- In September 2022, the Neslislah 1 was involved in another illegal transshipment, with the Mirem, according to Mauritanian news outlet Carrefour de la République Islamique de Mauritanie.
- This refrigerated vessel is owned by Aziz Balikcilik ve Deniz Tasimaciligi Ltd Company, according to the Turkish Chamber of Maritime Commerce. It is chartered by CEPP Sarl in Mauritania, found in a 2022 report by the Fisheries Transparency Initiative. CEPP Sarl is located in Zone Franche de Nouadhibou and lists an email address for Simon Zhang under contact information, according to China Feed Online. This is significant because Simon Zhang is the executive deputy general manager of the Sunrise Oceanic Resources Exploitation Company, which operates a fishmeal plant in Mauritania. In September 2022, the Neslisah 1 transshipped with the Turkish vessel Mirem in an area six nautical miles from Cap Blanc, in violation of Mauritanian maritime regulations, according to a post by Cridem.
- Although transshipment is banned in Mauritanian waters, the Neslislah 1 engaged in what Oceanmind, a maritime investigations firm, said was likely transshipment behavior in at least one incident in 2021.
Notes
Between January 2020 and April 2026, the Neslisah 1 had at least 40 likely transshipment meetings. Its most frequent partners include Pescador 1, Habibin Yavuz, Kavramis Mahmut, F/V Mercator, and Can Kul 1.
Transshipment occurs when fishing vessels offload their catch to a refrigerated carrier that transports it to port, rather than the vessel going itself. Reefers can haul catch from multiple fishing vessels at once, which makes supply chain tracing difficult.
Supply Chain
Neslisah 1 is related to at least six companies upstream, including six ships.