Yahoo – AFP,
Jung Ha-Won, 7 May 2015
South Korean fishermen who work the flashpoint maritime border with North Korea tend to be a resilient bunch, but these days a larger, more powerful neighbour is making them lose sleep.
![]() |
A South
Korean coastguard cutter arrives at the country's northernmost
island of
Baengnyeong (AFP Photo/Danny Kim)
|
South Korean fishermen who work the flashpoint maritime border with North Korea tend to be a resilient bunch, but these days a larger, more powerful neighbour is making them lose sleep.
"North
Korea is nothing compared to the Chinese fishing ships," said Choi
Won-Jin, who has fished the crab-rich waters around his home island of
Daecheong for decades.
Daecheong
is one of five "frontline" islands whose proximity to the disputed
border with North Korea means they are manned by thousands of South Korean soldiers
and bristling with artillery units and bomb shelters.
![]() |
A South
Korean coastguard vessel patrols
near the country's northernmost island of
Baengnyeong (AFP Photo/Danny Kim)
|
According
to official estimates, more than 1,000 Chinese fishing ships illegally accessed
exclusive South Korean waters around Daecheong last year, with only four
coastguard ships on hand to pose a deterrent.
The numbers
have been growing every year as China's increasing affluence and appetite for
seafood pushes more fishermen to venture beyond its overfished waters.
Smaller,
wooden Chinese ships sneaking into South Korean waters were once tolerated in
an area where the top priority has always been guarding against potential
incursions from North Korea.
'Nothing
left'
But in recent
years, the small boats have given way to larger steel trawlers who engage in
bottom trawling -- dragging a large, weighted net across the sea floor -- and
sweep up "everything in their path," Choi told AFP.
"By
the time they are gone, we have nothing left. It's all gone, including our
fishing pots," he said.
Around
2,200 Chinese vessels have been stopped and fined by South Korea for illegal
fishing in the past four years, and the number of arrested fishermen jumped
from two in 2010 to 66 in 2013.
There were
only five arrests in 2014, but coastguard officials said that was largely due
to all resources being diverted to the lengthy rescue and recovery operation
that followed the Sewol ferry disaster in April that year.
Chinese
captains are well-organised, said coastguard commando Lee Kyung-Hak, and
frequently chain their ships together "like a big floating city" in
the event of a confrontation.
Crew
members often arm themselves with steel pipes and knives, and have been known
to throw burning gas canisters at officers trying to board their ships.
Overwhelming numbers
"We
are trying our best to drive them off our territory... but the sheer number of
them sometimes feels overwhelming," Lee told AFP.
A recent
study estimated that 675,000 tonnes of fisheries products were illegally taken
from South Korean waters in 2012 by China -- with a value of around 1.3
trillion won ($1.2 billion).
"If
anything, the situation has worsened since then," said Lee Kwang-Nam, head
of the Fisheries Policy Institute in Seoul who authored the 2014 study.
According
to Lee, the undermanned coastguard only manages to seize or arrest less than
one percent of Chinese poachers.
"Our
fisheries resources are relatively well-preserved thanks to strict
regulations... but may face serious shortages if this pace keeps up," he
told AFP.
Under
growing domestic pressure to crack down harder on the Chinese fishing vessels,
South Korean officials have signalled a tougher line with the start of this
year's fishing season in April.
"We
were greatly outnumbered and overwhelmed by them last year... but we've had
enough," said Yun Byoung-Doo, the chief of the Incheon coastguard which
guards the Yellow Sea border islands.
Yun said
the coastguard would use firearms, including handguns and onboard cannon more
actively "if deemed necessary."
China
says be 'reasonable'
Beijing's
foreign ministry, when contacted by AFP, did not directly comment on Seoul's
toughened stance against illegal fishing, but urged it to "enforce the law
in a reasonable way, and ensure the safety and lawful rights and
interests" of Chinese fishermen.
"China
will continue to strengthen the education and guidance for its fishermen,"
it said in a statement faxed to AFP.
![]() |
China's
increasing affluence and appetite
for seafood pushes more fishermen to
venture
beyond its overfished waters
(AFP Photo/Danny Kim)
|
Seoul
insists the violence is initiated by the Chinese crews and point to the
stabbing death of a South Korean coastguard member in 2011 by a Chinese
fisherman.
South
Korean fishing vessels have not been blameless themselves when it comes to illegal
fishing in waters as far away as the seas off West Africa.
But the
government has moved to eradicate the practice and South Korea was taken off
the US list of countries engaged in illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing
in February, and then from the EU list last month.
The
fishermen of Daecheong island hope the government can be equally effective in
curbing the illegal activities of the Chinese trawler fleets.
"This
is one of the biggest crises I've ever seen on this island," said Kim
Neung-Ho, whose father and grandfather also made their living in the waters off
Daecheong.
"At
this point we're not really counting on them all going away, because that's
just impossible," Kim told AFP.
"We
just hope that there will be fewer of them. Just a little fewer," he said.
Related Articles:




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.