Yahoo – AFP,
Preeti Jha, 1 July 2015
Migrant
workers sort fish in a port in Mahachai on the outskirts of Bangkok (AFP
Photo/Nicolas Asfouri)
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Mahachai
(Thailand) (AFP) - A belated Thai clampdown on illegal fishing is forcing
unlicensed vessels ashore, threatening to paralyse a key industry as the
kingdom desperately tries to avoid a European Union ban on exports worth $1
billion a year.
Barrels of
fish packed in ice are usually rolled off boats at a bustling port in Samut
Sakhon, a coastal province near Bangkok, by Myanmar and Cambodia migrant
workers who prop up the world's third largest seafood producer.
A migrant
worker sits on a fishing boat
in a port in Mahachai on the outskirts of
Bangkok
(AFP Photo/Nicolas Asfouri)
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Next to
buckets of red snapper destined to become fish balls for the local market and
fishmeal to rear shrimp marked for Europe, a Thai vessel owner says there are
"too many rules and too little time".
"We
will have to keep paying bills with no income," said the worried
59-year-old, who withheld his name, as he prepares to cease operations until he
can meet the conditions for a new permit.
The
Wednesday deadline to register boats with authorities and acquire permits under
revised standards, including installing equipment such as tracking devices,
comes after the European Union threatened to ban fish imports from the kingdom
unless it combats illegal fishing.
In April
Brussels issued Thailand with a "yellow card" for inadequate
fisheries monitoring, controls and punishment, warning that a "red
card" and eventual import ban would follow if it failed to improve within
six months.
The spectre
of losing $1 billion in European sales is a shortfall the ruling military can
ill-afford in an already sluggish economy.
Thailand
saw only 0.3 percent growth in the first quarter and exports have been slowing
in part, says the World Bank, due to an erosion in competitiveness.
Aphisit Techanitisawad,
president of The Thai Overseas Fisheries Association, estimates around 3,000
fishing vessels nationwide will forsake the seas from Wednesday.
A worker
checks canned fish at the
Anusorn Group factory in Tasai, on the
outskirts of
Bangkok (AFP Photo/
Nicolas Asfouri)
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Thailand's image battered
A recent
shortage in fresh fish has already seen his workers stop processing crab sticks
for French export, instead focussing on canning sardines and mackerel from
frozen supplies for the Myanmar and Cambodian markets.
A labour
ministry spokeswoman said around 80,000 migrants were working in Thai fisheries
since the deadline for compulsory migrant registrations closed Tuesday.
Aphisit
thinks the government could have imposed a more lenient timeframe for changes.
But premier
Prayut Chan-O-Cha has remained adamant the industry has been left unchecked for
too long.
"Don't
put any more pressure on government," he said when asked about rising
anger within the fishing industry.
"If we
don't pass these measures a 200 billion baht ($6 billion) industry could be
wiped out so everybody should cooperate," he said.
Thailand's
image has been battered in recent years by a series of fishing abuse
allegations from prominent rights groups of ships using slave and child labour
as well as trafficking victims.
Migrant
workers at work in a port in
Mahachai, on the outskirts of Bangkok
(AFP
Photo/Nicolas Asfouri)
|
Bangkok is
desperate to improve its standing, while sanctions have not yet been imposed,
laying out new measures including a ban on fishing workers under 18 in the
months since. The latest Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report is due for
imminent publication.
Observers
say that while the latest threat of an EU ban has triggered a renewed sense of
urgency in authorities, rushed actions will fail to combat illegal fishing in
the long-term.
Improving
"monitoring, control and surveillance" will help to tackle
longstanding problems of pirate fishing, slavery and trafficking in Thailand's
fisheries industry, said Daniel Murphy, a Bangkok-based campaigner for the
Environmental Justice Foundation.
But by
rapidly regulating the neglected sector the government "risks regularising
more vessels than Thailand's exhausted waters can support as well a significant
number of vessels which have spent years openly flouting fishing laws", he
said.
Related Articles:
A fisherman
formerly held in slave-like conditions by a Thai-owned fishing firm in
Benjina,
Maluku, shows evidence of abuse. (Antara Foto/Humas Kementerian
Kelautan)
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