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An employee of Cyprea Marine Foods fillets freshly-caught yellow fin tuna fish at the company's refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan workers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.

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maldives93-12-11-2007.jpg
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© Richard Baker. No copying, screen grabbing, transmission or publication without permission.
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5315x3543 / 3.6MB
Richard Baker reportage photojournalism environmental issues economics economy financial finance health relationships transportation work Maldives Indian Ocean Islamic Muslim Republic state country atoll island coastal remote cultural fishing tuna yellow fin trade business processing factory Himmafushi company Maldivian employer industry hygiene industrial Kaafu Atoll Himafushi supply exporting fresh local community EU standards Cyprea Marine Foods employee career job workforce workplace working worker employment cleanliness clothing mask hairnet Thunus albacaraes teamwork health and safety healthy vitamins cholesterol diet omega-3 Protein vitamin B12 steak loin flesh meat low cholesterol butchering slicing cutting knife jointing dead caught handling outlying draining board fish aquatic seafood marine tropical development export modern facilities speed cross-check sustainable dolphin friendly insulated international worldwide food industry agro-food labour labor slog salary wage guts anatomy man staff crew team traditional manual labour technique method skill butcher freshly-caught carcass fish high-quality price profitable stringent widowers valuable logistics refrigerated prime still inert fisheries efficient line caught seafood nutrition fishery occupation livelihood nutritional nutritious
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The Journey of Tuna, The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work (large edit)
An employee of Cyprea Marine Foods fillets freshly-caught  yellow fin tuna fish at the company's refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan workers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
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