Fishermen Reel In Whale Shark In The Port of Karachi

Sounds suss.

There seems to be a lot of blood coming out for a shark they "found" dead
 
here's another article:
Giant Whale Shark washes ashore at Karachi Harbour, triggering panic in local population | NewsPakistan.PK
Karachi Harbour presented the looks of a cluttered zoo on Tuesday February 7, when a giant Whale Shark washed over the shores of the busy port, pulling in hordes of local people. The giant fish, weighing around seven metric tons, was the centre of attraction of hundreds of people from all walks of life who gathered to catch a glimpse of the deep-sea creature for the first time.

Attempts were underway to lift the fish over the port platform, using the available cranes. The heavy carcass broke the one inch steel rope and a full 35-ton crane had to be called in to get the fish out of the water.

The circumstances of the death of the Whale Shark is still unknown and although this is not the first time a Whale Shark has ended up dead at the shores of Karachi, the reasons of their death are still shrouded in mystery.

“It was dead when my men found it,” said Muhammad Yousuf, who owns the fibre boat that was used to tow the body to Karachi. “We will try to auction it. Let’s see what it fetches us.”

There were people interested to buy the dead fish for a possible exhibition, minting money from the visitors. The bid surged to 1.7 million PKR and was later sold to a considerably lesser price by the Karachi Fish Harbour Authority, which triggered a controversy later in the day.

“We all thought it was auctioned for Rs1.7 million. Now it has been confirmed that Qasim Niazi, a fisheries dealer, bought it for much less than that,” said Hafeezur Rehman, an official at the fisheries auction hall.

National Institute of Oceanography’s biologist Dr Hina Baig said that the whale-shark must have lost its way and become stuck in the shallow waters. “Whales use eco-sounds to find their way in water and if a large ship comes in the way, they get disoriented.”

Although Dr. Baig was severely delusional for being unaware of the fact that Whale Sharks are categorized as sharks and not Whales and do not have eco sound systems which she so confidently referred to.

Marine biologist at the WWF Moazam Khan said that around 30 whale-sharks have been found dead in Pakistani waters in the past seven years. “No one kills them intentionally now.” He said that the whale shark is an endangered species and should not be killed
in any case.
 
National Institute of Oceanography’s biologist Dr Hina Baig said that the whale-shark must have lost its way and become stuck in the shallow waters. “Whales use eco-sounds to find their way in water and if a large ship comes in the way, they get disoriented.”

:confused:

Is he realy a biologist with the National Institute of Oceanography

I liked this part though :p

Although Dr. Baig was severely delusional
 
those two paragraphs were my favourite part as well :D

(and Dr. Hina Baig is a she)
 
Pakistani man fights police over shark - Yahoo!7
Qasim Khan has waged the unlikeliest of battles with Pakistani authorities over the right to charge hundreds of curious visitors 20 rupees (A18.6 cents) each to see a roughly 12-metre whale shark he bought from a fisherman.

Khan is in the business of buying fish, albeit usually much smaller ones, and jumped at the chance on Tuesday to pay about $A2000 for the behemoth, which was discovered dead in the Arabian Sea off the southern Pakistani city of Karachi.

Business was brisk on Wednesday, as several thousand people paid to see the brown and white-spotted shark, which Khan set up under a cloth tent next to the harbour.

People crowded around to put their hands on the massive shark, and families snapped their picture with it - ignoring the pungent smell as it began to rot.

But police cracked down on Thursday, saying fishery authorities had decided people should be allowed to see the shark for free. Khan resisted and hid his prize attraction under the giant piece of green cloth he had previously used as a tent.

The move sparked a comic game of cat and mouse between Khan and the police. They would order him to remove the cover, which he would do briefly before replacing it. Then the cycle would start over again.

"We are told to protect and facilitate the people to see this rare fish, but this man is not allowing this," said police inspector Mohammad Aslam at the scene.

Khan countered by saying he paid 200,000 rupees for it.

"To recover my cost I am charging just 20 rupees per ticket, but the forsaken fishery authorities have deprived me of this fortune," he said.

The altercation angered some of the hundreds of people who crowded around the shark.

"We came here to see the fish after the media hype, but to our dismay they are not allowing us to see it," said a young businessman, Sohail Shah.

One local newspaper had trumpeted the discovery with a headline that read "All is 'whale': 'Moby Dick' comes to town ahead of Karachi Literature Festival."

Some were also upset to see people climbing all over the shark.

"This is sheer disrespect for animals," said 20-year-old nursing student Usman Zada.

But nothing could dampen the enthusiasm of nine-year-old Fizza Umar, who came with her father.

"It was so huge!" Umar said. "I wish I could take it home."

Ashraf Daniel, a pastor of an Anglican church, was also delighted by the visit because he felt it reinforced his religious faith.

"Our Bible says that Saint Jonah survived three days in the abdomen of a whale, so I brought my children to see themselves the strength of God," said Daniel.

I like the last bit :D
 
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