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| Indonesian authorities sink an impounded Vietnamese fishing boat at Datuk island,on May 4, 2019. (AFP Photo/LOUIS ANDERSON) |
Pontianak (Indonesia) (AFP) - Indonesia began sinking dozens of impounded foreign boats Saturday to deter illegal fishing in its waters, a week after a naval vessel clashed with a Vietnamese coastguard near the South China Sea.
Up to 51
foreign boats -- including from Vietnam, Malaysia and China -- will be scuttled
at several different locations over the next two weeks, officials said.
Over a
dozen were scuttled Saturday near Pontianak, in West Kalimantan province.
Fisheries
minister Susi Pudjiastuti said the action was necessary to warn neighbouring
countries that Indonesia was serious about fighting illegal fishing.
"There's
no other way," she said. "This is actually the most beautiful
solution for our nation, but yes, it's scary for other countries."
She said
Indonesia suffered great economic loss from lax regulations that gave leeway
for foreign boats to fish in Indonesian waters.
Since
president Joko Widodo took office in 2014, hundreds of captured foreign fishing
vessels have been sunk -- more than half from Vietnam.
The
practice was suspended for several months, but has resumed since last week when
a Vietnamese coastguard boat rammed an Indonesian navy ship attempting to seize
an illegal trawler.
A dozen
fishermen were detained and remain in Indonesian custody.
"If we
don't act firm, they will be even more daring. I believe these collisions will
get worse one day, this will escalate," Pudjiastuti said.
Jakarta
claims the area in the southernmost reaches of the South China Sea as its
exclusive economic zone and two years ago changed its name to the North Natuna
Sea in a bid to show sovereignty.
More
recently, it inaugurated a new military base in the chain of several hundred
small islands to beef up defences. The moves prompted criticism from Beijing,
whose claims in the sea overlap Indonesia's around the remote Natuna Islands.

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